Early human ancestors in central Africa 3.5 million years ago ate mostly tropical grasses and sedges
"We found evidence suggesting that early hominins, in central Africa at least, ate a diet mainly comprised of tropical grasses and sedges," co-author
Julia Lee-Thorp, a University of Oxford archaeologist, said in a press release.
She continued, "No African great apes, including chimpanzees, eat this type of food despite the fact it grows in abundance in tropical and subtropical regions. The only notable exception is the
savannah baboon which still forages for these types of plants today. We were surprised to discover that early hominins appear to have consumed more than even the baboons."
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