Nutcracker Man

smithsonian OH%
Image from the Smithsonian Institution 

 

 

Other Names: OH 5, “Zinj”

Species: Australopithecus boisei

Age:  ~1.8 million years old

Location: Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Discovery Date: July 17, 1959

 

 

 

Tanzania
Location Found, Image from Live Science

On July 17, 1959 Mary Leakey made an exciting discovery- the nearly complete and well-preserved cranium (skull without the mandible) of an early hominin. Later nicknamed the Nutcracker Man, the fossil was identified as a young adult male, notable for his wide face (from laterally flaring zygomatic arches) and large post-canine teeth (premolars and molars that are almost 4 times larger than modern humans). Other notable features include:

  • prominent sagittal crest on the top of his skull
  • laterally sloping supraorbital tori (brow ridge)
  • 2:1:2:3 dental formula
  • flat or slightly concave face

    These features suggest that Nutcracker man had:

    • powerful chewing muscles
      • the temporalis (chewing) muscle attached on top of his head (to his sagittal crest) and went under his wide zygomatic arch
    • relied on grinding and crushing to break down his food
      • what his large post-canines are adapted for 

        reconstruction
        Artist’s Reconstruction, Image from Live Science

Fossil Condition

damage
Taphonomic Damage, Image from eFossils

There was very minimal damage to the cranium when it was found. A section of the left zygomatic bone and parts of the top of the skull were missing. There was also slight taphonomic damage, as would be expected after ~ 1.8 million years.

 

 

Works Cited 

Anon. 2016. OH 5. The Smithsonian Institution’s Human Origins Program [Internet].         Available from: http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-fossils/fossils/oh-5

Conroy GC, Pontzer H. 2012. Reconstructing Human Origins: A Modern Synthesis. New       York, NY: Norton and Company.

Staff LS. 2014. Photos: The Life of Nutcracker Man. LiveScience [Internet]. Available   from: https://www.livescience.com/42421-nutcracker-man-photos.html

University of Texas at Austin, Department of Anthropology. Paranthropus boisei: OH 5.   eFossils Resources [Internet]. Available from:   http://efossils.org/page/boneviewer/Paranthropus boisei/OH 5#100487662