THE MISSING LINK
AFRICAN INVESTIGATIONS SCIENTIFIC SENSATION. Will “ the missing link ” be discovered at last? A native village, consisting of a few grass huts,, on the shores of Lake Victoria, near Kendn Bay, in Kenya, has provided arelueologicai evidence which is likely to startle the world of scientists. Dr L. S. B. LeSkey, of .'Cambridge, leader of the East AfciMii Arehteologieal‘Expedition, who has been exploring the district for the past, live months, reports that he has found the lower jawbone of the “ homo sapiens ”■ typo of human being—i.e., the modem species of man—in deposits similar to those of the lowest bed at Oldaway (Tanganyika), found by Dr Leakey in October last. Dr Leakey puts the newly-discovered Lake Victoria man one step further back than the Oldaway man, who may have lived some 2,000,000 years ago. The mystery is deepened by the discovery in the" same area of fragments of anthropoid apes, which Dr Leakey is sending immediately to British experts. Those were found in Miocene deposits. This last discovery, coupled with that of the Lake Victoria man, leads Dr Leakey to the belief that “ the missing Jink 1 ’ will he finally established. The Oldaway skeleton was discovered in 1913 by a German professor, Dr Hans Reck, but he was unable to find evidence on the spot to date the discovery. Dr Leakey, however, last October discovered evidence in the form of extinct animals and fauna, which proved that the Oldaway man went back to an age more remote than that of any similar discovery. Tools were found'in all the Oldaway beds. Dr Leakey also found part of the skeleton of a dinotherium—a prehistoric form of elephant. It was formerly believed that the first man was hundreds of thousands of years later than the dinotherium. The jawbone was found in the samo deposits as tools of the dinotherium and prc-Chellean period. There other “ homo sapiens ” skulls were also found from deposits containing fauna identical with the Oldaway skeleton. Three examples of anthropoid ape (it is added) wera found on Rnstinga Island.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 21129, 15 June 1932, Page 1
Word Count
340THE MISSING LINK Evening Star, Issue 21129, 15 June 1932, Page 1
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