Over 1,500 fossil remains were found by paleoanthropologist Lee Berger and his team who says, "It absolutely questions what makes us human. And I don't think we know anymore what does." To put the find in perspective, he states, "This is like opening up Tutankhamen's tomb. It is that extreme and perhaps that influential in this stage of our history." At present, the team has yet to date Homo naledi's fossils, but think of the questions when they do...
Within a deep and narrow cave in South Africa, paleoanthropologist Lee Berger and his team found fossil remains belonging to the newest member of our human family. The Homo naledi discovery adds another exciting chapter to the human evolution story by introducing an ancestor that was primitive but shared physical characteristics with modern humans.
Because the cave system where the bones were located was extremely difficult to access, it could be speculated that these hominins practiced a behavior previously believed to be modern: that of deliberately disposing of their dead underground.
From CNN:
