Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Olduvai Gorge Museum, located 5 km beyond the monument, is situated on the rim of the gorge at the junction of the main gorge and the side gorge. As one of the largest onsite museums in Africa, the museum provides educational exhibits related to the gorge and its long history.
The Olduvai Gorge Museum (Swahili: Makumbusho ya Bonde la Oltupai) is located in the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Northern Tanzania on the edge of the Olduvai Gorge.The museum was founded by Mary Leakey and is now under the jurisdiction of the Tanzanian government's Department of Cultural Antiquities and is managed by the Ngorongoro Conservation Area Authority.
Group Formation Period Notes Mbuga Clays Formation: Pleistocene-Holocene [1] [2]Peninj Gorge: Humbu Formation: Gelasian-Calabrian [3]Sambu Lavas Formation: Zanclean-Calabrian [4] ...
The Olduvai Gorge is a steep-sided ravine in the Great Rift Valley, which stretches along eastern Africa. Olduvai is in the eastern Serengeti Plains in northeastern Tanzania and is about 50 kilometres (31 mi) long. It lies in the rain shadow of the Ngorongoro highlands and is the driest part of the region. [28] The gorge is named after ...
She also discovered the robust Zinjanthropus skull at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, eastern Africa. For much of her career she worked with her husband, Louis Leakey , at Olduvai Gorge, where they uncovered fossils of ancient hominines and the earliest hominins , as well as the stone tools produced by the latter group.
Louis Seymour Bazett Leakey (7 August 1903 – 1 October 1972) was a Kenyan-British palaeoanthropologist and archaeologist whose work was important in demonstrating that humans evolved in Africa, particularly through discoveries made at Olduvai Gorge with his wife, fellow palaeoanthropologist Mary Leakey.
Olduvai Hominid number 9 (OH 9), known as the Chellean Man, is a fossilized skull cap of an early hominin, found in LLK II, Olduvai Gorge by Louis S. B. Leakey in 1960. [1] It is believed to be ca. 1.4 million years old. Its cranial capacity is estimated at than 1067 cm 3, the largest value among all known African Homo erectus specimens. [2]
The site of the Laetoli footprints (Site G) is located 45 km south of Olduvai gorge. ... South Africa in 1995, dating to approximately 117,000 years ago.