Google Doodle celebrates Lucy the Australopithecus | Daily Mail Online: "Google Doodle celebrates 'Lucy': Animation marks the anniversary of when the Australopithecus skeleton was unearthed
Fossil dubbed AL 288-1 or 'Lucy' was found 41 years ago in Ethiopia
3.2 million-year-old bones changed the understanding of our origins
Lucy Google Doodle shows Australopithecus afarensis walking between a chimpanzee and a human to show the transition between the two species
By SARAH GRIFFITHS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 13:12 GMT, 24 November 2015 | UPDATED: 13:26 GMT, 24 November 2015
224
shares
93
View comments
On this day in 1974, the 3.2 million-year-old fossil of a female skeleton named AL 288-1 or 'Lucy' was unearthed in Ethiopia - and it would later change our understanding of the origins of mankind.
To mark the 41st anniversary of this discovery, Google has released an animated Doodle.
It shows the previously unknown species Australopithecus afarensis walking between a chimpanzee and a human to illustrate the transition between the two species.
On this day in 1974, the 3.2 million-year-old fossil of a female skeleton named AL 288-1 or 'Lucy' was unearthed in Ethiopia. To mark the anniversary, Google has released a Doodle that shows Australopithecus afarensis walking between a chimpanzee and a human to illustrate the transition between the two species
According to analysis of her bones, Lucy is thought to have walked on two legs in what is now Ethiopia, 3.2 million years ago (the Google Doodle is pictured)
According to the analysis of her bones, Lucy is thought to have walked on two legs.
While her gait may have resembled ours, she had a small skull more similar to a chimpanzee's, which supports the idea that walking came before an increase in brain size.
RELATED ARTICLES
Previous
1
Next
Which office ANIMAL are you? Take the personality test to...
Getting under the skin of medieval Bibles: Ultra-thin pages...
SHARE THIS ARTICLE
Share
She was much smaller than us, standing 3.7 feet (1.1metres) tall when fully grown and weighed just 64 lbs (29kg) - making her between twice and three times as light as a modern British woman.
Despite being so old, her skeleton is 40 per cent intact excluding the hand and foot bones.
It is this, and her name, which Donald C Johanson, who discovered the fossil near the village Hadar in the Awash Valley, believes has made her so famous and likeable.
+4
Lucy was much smaller than us, standing 3.7 feet (1.1metres) tall when fully grown and weighed just 64 lbs (29kg) - making her between twice and three times as light as a modern British woman. A sculptor's rendering of how she may have looked is shown above
+4
+4
Despite being so old, her skeleton (pictured left and as a 3D model right) is 40 per cent intact excluding the hand and foot bones, giving us a good idea of her height and posture
He has since unearthed 363 specimens of her kind, spanning 400,000 years, but Lucy was much older than other hominin fossils known at the time and expanded the field of research massively.
HOW DID LUCY WALK?
One of the most important features of the Lucy skeleton is a valgus knee, which indicates she walked upright.
Her thigh bone shows a mixture of ancestral traits such as a small femoral head, while the greater trochanter - next to the head at the top of the bone - is short and human-like.
Another indication that she sits between chimps and humans is her arms.
The length of her humerus to femur is 84 per cent, which compares to 71.8 per cent for humans and 97.8 per cent for chimpanzees.
Her skeleton shows Lucy had a lumbar curve – another indication she walked upright.
The palaeoanthropologist told Time that Lucy was named after the Beatles song 'Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds,' which was popular with archaeologists at the camp and was played on repeat.
One of the researchers suggested the name for the fossil and it stuck.
Dr Johanson believes the non-threatening name helps people think of Lucy as a real personality and they 'can envision the three-and-a-half foot tall female walking around,' because her skeleton is so intact.
He said: 'She showed us conclusively that upright walking and bipedalism preceded all other changes we'd normally consider being human, such as tool-making.
'She gave us a glimpse of what older ancestors would look like.'
Since the discovery, it has become accepted that Neanderthals are not our direct ancestors and fossils have been found that are twice as old as Lucy, as well as 'hobbits' in Indonesia to make our family tree 'bushier' with lots of new characters being added.
+4
Dr Donald Johanson who found the fossils believes the non-threatening name helps people think of Lucy as a real personality and they 'can envision a little three-and-a-half foot tall female walking around,' because her skeleton is so intact. Australopithecus afarensis family are imagined in a museum exhibition (shown)
An even more complete skeleton of a related hominid, Ardipithecus was found in the same Awash Valley in 1992.
'Ardi', like Lucy, was a hominid-becoming-hominin species but is older, at 4.4 million years old.
The Lucy fossil is kept in Ethiopia, although casts are in many museums around the world and the original toured the US for six years, from 2007. "
'via Blog this'
Yoske runs a small and popular hummus place in our town. He’s a Ḥabad ḥasid and keeps a shelf near the door with religious literature for customers to browse in while waiting. A few days ago, I was surprised to come across there, among the tracts of advice and inspirational treatises, a slim paperbound volume identified by its cover as Volume III, No. 1 (1980-81), of theJournal of the American Society for Jewish Music. “Yoske,” I asked, showing it to him, “what is this doing here?” Yoske had no idea. “Someone must have donated it,” he said. “But if you found it, God wanted you to have it, so take it.” His term for God was the traditional ha-kadosh barukh hu, “the Holy One Blessed Be He.”
I took the Journal of the American Society for Jewish Music home with my hummus and soon was reading an article on “Seged: A Falasha Pilgrimage Festival.” Its author, Kate Kaufman Shelemay, later published a book titled Music, Ritual, and Falasha History.Yoske would have taken all this as a confirmation of his belief in Providence, because the Seged festival, an annual celebration of Ethiopian Jews—who are rarely called Falashas any longer and are often referred to as Beta Israel—occurs this year on November 11, just in time for today’s language column.
These days, Seged is observed almost exclusively in Israel, to which nearly all Ethiopian Jews have immigrated. Back in the early 1980s, however, it was restricted to the highlands of northern Ethiopia. As described by Shelemay:
On the 29th day of the eighth month [the Beta Israel lunar calendar begins, as the Jewish year did in antiquity, with the spring month of Nisan], . . . the Falashas come together to ascend a mountain, where they prostrate themselves in prayer. The fast observed by them during the mountaintop ceremony is broken when the community descends to the village below to take part in feasting and secular entertainment. . . . The nameseged is derived from a Geez root meaning “to bow” or “to prostrate oneself.”SIGN UP FOR OUR E-MAIL LISTGet the latest from Mosaic right in your inbox
Geez or Ge’ez, a south Semitic language no longer spoken, is sacred to both Christian and Jewish Ethiopians. The Torah of the Beta Israel, who had no knowledge of Hebrew, was written in it, and much of their liturgy is recited in it. Its Semitic affiliation can be seen in the word seged itself, a cognate of the Hebrew verb sagad,which, too, means to bow or prostrate oneself.
Anyone knowing Hebrew, indeed, can easily pick out many such words in the Ge’ez phrases that Shelemay records in the ceremony attended by her. In her list of the prayers recited on the mountaintop, for instance, there is one that begins ‘esebḥo la’egziabher baḥeywatya, “I will praise God in my life.” “I will praise” in Hebrew is ashabe’aḥ; “in my life” is beḥayay; and Hebrewle-, “to,” is like the la of la’egziabher, the preposition following the Ge’ez verb for “to praise.” Although Hebrew belongs to the northwest Semitic family and is about as far from Ge’ez as two Semitic languages can be, their common roots are apparent.
But what Hebrew canbe recognized in egziabher, “God”? None at all, which is something to think about.
Egziabher is a Ge’ez word with three components: egzi, “Lord”; –a, a possessive postclitic; and beher or bher, “nations”—in short, “Lord of the Nations.” The word is not an immemorially old one. Rather, it was coined during the 4th-century reign of Ezana, Ethiopia’s first Christian monarch, who ruled over and extended the domain of the powerful kingdom of Aksum. Its coiner was probably Ezana’s religious adviser Frumentius, the Syrian-born first bishop of the Ethiopian church. Prior to the arrival of Christianity, the Aksumites had been pagans worshiping different gods and lacking a word in their vocabulary for the single God of monotheism. Egziabher was a neologism invented to fill this gap, and to this day it is the word for God in Amharic, the official language of Ethiopia that is descended from Ge’ez and spoken by many Beta Israel.
Could this have a bearing on Ethiopian Jewry’s origins? Broadly speaking, there exist two opposing schools of thought regarding those origins. One is that the Beta Israel community in Ethiopia predated Christianity and continued to maintain itself after the latter’s establishment; the other, that it was a Judaizing offshoot of Christian groups that did not crystallize until a thousand years after Ezana.
Proponents of the first view have pointed to the existence in Ge’ez of a small number of clearly Hebrew-derived words, such asmeṣwat, “alms,” from Hebrew mitzvah, “commandment” or “good deed,” and tabot, “ark,” from Hebrew tevah. Perhaps the most interesting of these is the Ge’ez word for Friday, ‘arb, which can only be explained as deriving from Hebrew erev, “evening,” and specifically, from the expression erev shabbat, “Sabbath eve.” Unless there were already Jews in Ethiopia in pre-Christian times, it is argued, such words could not have entered Ge’ez.
Adherents of the second view concede that Jews, settling in Ethiopia from Yemen, Egypt, or elsewhere, could have introduced such words into Ge’ez but contend that the Beta Israel cannot be traced back to them. And this, it may be, is where egziabher comes in. After all, if a pre-Christian Jewish community had survived as the Beta Israel, wouldn’t it be reasonable to assume that it would have preserved its own Jewish—that is, originally Hebrew—word or words for God, brought by it to Ethiopia before a parallel Ge’ez word existed? If only a single Hebrew word had remained in its vocabulary, wouldn’t this in all likelihood have been that word?