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Homo Habilis
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HOMO HABILIS
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Homo Habilis
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Homo Habilis
LA ODISEA DE LA ESPECIE.....EL HOMO HABILIS (PARTE 3)
La odisea de la especie Homo habilis
Homo Habilis Documentary By Evelyn - Progress Post for professor
Mankind Rising - Homo Habilis
3 000 000 AC Homo Habilis
Homo Habilis
The Song of Homo Habilis (Biological Anthropology 1 Final Project)
HOMO HABILIS
Homo habilis: las primeras herramientas.
Homo Habilis
El Primer verdadero ser humano, el Homo habilis
Human Origins: The Homo Habilis
H2 Homo Habilis
Homo Habilis
LA ODISEA DE LA ESPECIE.....EL HOMO HABILIS (PARTE 3)
Homo habilis
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Laboratory session with Homo habilis and Homo rudolfensis
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Homo habilis U - Reinventing the University Experience: John Boyer at TEDxBinghamtonUniversity
Homo habilis.wmv
Homo habilis ( /ˈhoʊmoʊ ˈhæbɨlɪs/, "handy-man") is a species of the genus Homo, which lived from approximately 2.33 to 1.4 million years ago, during the Gelasian Pleistocene period. The discovery and description of this species is credited to both Mary and Louis Leakey, who found fossils in Tanzania, East Africa, between 1962 and 1964.Homo habilis (or possibly H. rudolfensis) was the earliest known species of the genus Homo until May 2010, when H. gautengensis was discovered, a species believed to be even older than H. habilis. In its appearance and morphology, H. habilis is thus the least similar to modern humans of all species in the genus (except possibly H. rudolfensis). H. habilis was short and had disproportionately long arms compared to modern humans; however, it had a less protruding face than the australopithecines from which it is thought to have descended. H. habilis had a cranial capacity slightly less than half of the size of modern humans. Despite the ape-like morphology of the bodies, H. habilis remains are often accompanied by primitive stone tools (e.g. Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania and Lake Turkana, Kenya).