This Kenyan site is WILDIN’ The best quote from this whole report is: Archaeologists have been working in East Africa since the 1930s, but there is still much more to learn, Dr Louys said. "There are still so many discoveries to be made." Benjamin Schoville of the University of Queensland (THATS MY HOME TOWN) said the discovery combined many levels of evidence about aspects of human evolution that had only been hinted at before. "It gives a really clear snapshot of what was happening between 3 and 2.6 million years ago," said Dr Schoville, who studies tool technologies at other sites in Africa. #history #archeology #anthropology #stopwhatyouredoing #HYPEDUP @Tani Berlo @Tani Berlo @Tani Berlo