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Lucy's Legacy: The Hidden
Treasures of Ethiopia
By Groum Abate
From an
Interview which appeared in Capital
Ethiopia: On November
24, 1974 after a long hot morning of surveying for
fossils, Donald Johanson and Tom Gray made the
discovery of a lifetime. Searching in a maze of
ravines at Hadar in northern Ethiopia, Johanson
spotted a tiny fragment of arm bone on the ground
that he quickly identified as a hominid &endash; an
ancestral member of the family of humans. Looking
up the slope, he saw a skull bone, then a femur,
some ribs, a pelvis and the lower jaw. After
extensive screening and sorting, the team unearthed
47 bones of a skeleton - nearly 40% of a hominid
that had lived approximately 3.2 million years ago.
Its small size and the shape of its pelvis
identified the skeleton as female. In life, she
would have stood approximately 3.5 feet tall and
weighed between 60 to 65 pounds. To this day, Lucy
remains the oldest and most complete adult human
ancestor fully retrieved from African
soil.
An inspired
name
Technically, she was known as
AL-288. But during the celebration on the night of
her discovery, the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky
With Diamonds" was played over and over. Someone
suggested she be named Lucy and the name stuck. The
Ethiopian people refer to her as "Dinkenesh," an
Amharic language term meaning "You are
beautiful."
An entirely new
species
The discovery of Lucy yielded an
entirely new species of human ancestor, known as
Australopithecus afarensis, or "southern ape of
Afar," after the region of Ethiopia where the bones
were found. To determine if a fossil represents a
new species, paleoanthropologists compare it to
known samples, noting the similarities and
differences. Then, using knowledge of evolutionary
processes as well as anatomy and biology, it is
determined whether the differences are significant
enough to distinguish a new species.
How do we know she was a
she?
The fossil known as Lucy was
determined to be female based on several traits:
§Lucy's small size compared
to other representatives of the same species.
§The shape of her pelvis
compared to the pelvis of the larger individuals.
§Lucy's small size is seen
as an expression of "sexual dimorphism." This
terminology refers to the difference in shape
between individuals of different sex in the same
species. For example, in mammals, the male is
larger than the female.
§The first complete male
afarensis skull was discovered in 1994, less than
ten kilometers from the site of Lucy's discovery.
An analysis of the skull indicated that afarensis
males were twice the weight of females.
Capital talked to Gezahgne
Kebede president of the Ethio-American Trade and
Investment Council and an honorary member of
Council General of Houston, Texas behind Lucy's
visit.
On the departure of Lucy and her
present status.
Gezahegne: Lucy, the oldest
celebrity to ever visit Houston, arrived with a
security befitting a head of state three months ago
from Ethiopia and immediately went into hiding at
the Houston Museum of Natural
Science(HMNS).
Lucy's Legacy: The Hidden
Treasures of Ethiopia is an international
exhibition organized by The Houston Museum of
Natural Science in collaboration with the Ministry
of Culture and Tourism and the Ethiopian Exhibition
Coordinating Committee.
The Smith Foundation and
Ethiopian Airlines.
The publicized concerns about
the safety of shipping the 3.18 million-year-old
fossil remains has been done without any
problem.
The world's oldest hominid's
arrival was so tightly guarded and we don't discuss
the security arrangements for these things further.
But I can assure you it was done very carefully.
Lucy arrived on her first-ever exhibit tour of the
U.S., with her escort Mamitu Yilma, Director of the
National Museum here in Addis Ababa, where Lucy is
normally kept. The discovery of Lucy continues to
profoundly influence our understanding of human
origins. "Lucy's Legacy" provides people the
opportunity to better understand current scientific
theory of human evolution and to see for themselves
how, more than 30 years after her discovery, she
continues to create debate. Ethiopia's rich
cultural heritage is one of the best-kept secrets
in the world. "Lucy's Legacy" introduces you to the
incredible five million-year history of this
fascinating country, known as the Cradle of
Mankind. More than 100 artifacts in the exhibit
illuminate this rich heritage, including fossils,
historical manuscripts, paintings, coins, musical
instruments, implements of daily use, religious
artifacts and more.
This exciting exhibit consists
of two segments. Part one begins with the story of
ancient Ethiopia and the Kingdom of Aksum.
According to tradition, the son of King Solomon and
the Queen of Sheba, King Menelik became the founder
of the Solomonic dynasty. The story starts with the
kingdom of Aksum in the northern highlands of the
country. During a period of roughly seven
centuries, a succession of kings ruled a territory
that covered large portions of present-day Ethiopia
as well as neighboring Eritrea and portions of
Yemen. This section follows the country's rise in
religious, economic and cultural power through the
centuries, and ends with modern Ethiopia and the
end of the reign of Emperor Haile Selassie
I.
The second part of the exhibit
examines the many species of early hominid that
called Ethiopia home, culminating with the display
of the world's most famous fossil, Lucy. Even the
Ethiopian public has seen Lucy only twice. The Lucy
exhibition at the Ethiopian Natural History Museum
in the capital, Addis Ababa, is a replica, the real
remains are usually locked in a vault. Emphasis on
geographic and chronological context will set the
stage to tell the story of our ancestors. A wide
variety of multi-media presentations and text
panels will also elaborate on what anthropologists
do, and how we get from finding a fossil to telling
a story such as the one we will present in this
exhibit.
Visitors will not only have the
opportunity to come face-to-face with Lucy, but
also meet with the earliest known members of our
own species, Homo sapiens, who lived almost 200,000
years ago in what is now Ethiopia. Other important
paleoanthropological discoveries will also be
represented to complete the current account of
human evolution as known to scientists
today.
On how has Lucy been
received?
Gezahegne: At present and to be
specific until Sunday February 10, 156,000 people
exhibited Lucy's Legacy, and it is among the
museums top exhibits in regards to attendance.
About 3,500 advance tickets had been sold before
the opening of the exhibition and lines to buy
tickets at the museum everyday is a normal scene.
The show marks the first time Lucy, which is also
the ambassador of Ethiopia, has been displayed in
public outside her native Ethiopia.
At present the amazing figure
has about 25 museums across the United States
requested to exhibit Lucy in their Museum. Even
Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History,
which claimed that Ethiopian artifacts would not
come to the Smithsonian including Lucy because she
is too fragile to move, inquired us to exhibit
Lucy. (Many of the world's top paleoanthropologists
have been outraged by the decision to take Lucy out
of Ethiopia, saying the fragile skeleton may be
damaged irreparably during the journey)
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