Experience a paleontology trip to Olduvai Gorge near Ngorongoro - Africa Natural Tours ( africanaturaltours.com )
Experience a
paleontology trip to Olduvai Gorge near Ngorongoro:
Africa Natural Tours (For Kilimanjaro, Serengeti and Zanzibar) the best tour
company in Tanzania
Specialized
in: Wildlife safaris, Mountain climbing, Cultural tourism, and Beach holidays
in East Africa
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Email: info@africanaturaltours.com Website:
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Experience a paleontology trip to
Olduvai Gorge near Ngorongoro
Olduvai
Gorge (aka Olduvai) in northern Tanzania is a rich palaeoanthropology site to
visit when on a safari-cum-cultural holiday in East Africa. The gorge,
located in between the Ngorongoro Maasai lands and the Serengeti
wildlife plains, is a deep ravine more than 48 kilometers (30 miles) in
length with a weathered monolith where one can clearly trace the strata of
succeeding changes in climate over millions of years.
This
is where the Louis and Mary Leakey excavated evidence of the evolution of
mankind through varied distinct layers of different sediments. These show the
development of the area from a lake to dry grassland carved by a river and
deeply influenced by volcanic activity. AfricanMecca Safaris recommend a trip
diversion to Olduvai Gorge as a moving enlightening experience not to be missed
when you take your life-changing vacation in Serengeti and Ngorongoro.
Paleontologists Wilhelm Kattwinkel and Hans Reck discovered fossil remains in
Olduvai of extinct three-toed horses in 1911 and a hominid skeleton in 1913
respectively. But the war interrupted further explorations.
The Leakey’s, following up these leads from a
museum in Germany, had to suspend their digs until after World War II and in
between the independence struggles in Kenya and Tanzania (East Africa
Protectorate). In the deepest layer, dating from 2 million years ago, they
found Homo habilis remains, with a brain half the size of modern man,
possibly co-occurring with Paranthropus Boise with more apelike
features, a sagittal crest, but a rounded cranial brain and a robust jaw, known
as “Nutcracker man” who was there until 1.75 million years ago and was thought
to use simple tools.
Then
Homo erectus or upright man made hand axes and occupied the site until Homo
sapiens appeared 195,000 years ago. Modern day fossil seekers on tour in
Olduvai Gorge have linked the development of humankind with the change in
ecosystems. Long-armed Homo habilis or the “handy man” was forced to
descend from trees to live on grassland and was followed by tool-making
hunters, as demonstrated by the evidence of more sophisticated hand axes and
deposits of bones which showed them to live in communities.
The
remains of stone circles may have indicated the building of primitive houses.
From casts of the footprint trail of early
hominids who first stood upright over 3.7 million years ago in Laetoli, through the bones and artefacts
recovered from the Olduvai Gorge and from Engaruka, where hominid teeth were
discovered dating back 2.4 million years, the modest, small museum at Olduvai
exhibits a diverse range of fascinating material, ably explained by
enthusiastic guides who will also accompany you to the valley where much was
found, to experience for yourself the surroundings in which our ancestors
developed as tool makers and social communities of hunter-gatherers.
Much controversy still exists and work is
still ongoing using modern technology to date and link the evolution of
humankind with the changes in landscape and climate which are now believed to
have catalyzed our development in what appears to be the earliest known home of
the ancestors of modern man.
For
more information visit www.africanaturaltours.com



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