Science | evolution Scientists Uncover Human-Like Species Boys find fossilized skeleton in South Africa By Kevin Spak Posted Apr 8, 2010 2:56 PM CDT Copied Professor Paul Dirksr, of the University of the Witwatersrand, discusses the nearly 2 million-year-old skeletons unearthed in South Africa, at Maropeng, near Johannesburg, Thursday. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell) A paleoanthropologist, his 9-year-old son, and his dog have uncovered a fossil that's generating a lot of "missing link" headlines. (Joel Achenbach of the Washington Post explains why those headlines are wrong here.) The boy was playing on a hill in South Africa, near where his father was searching for hominid bones, when he stumbled on the fossilized skeleton of a 4-foot-2-inch boy of a heretofore unknown species. Researchers scoured the area and found three more skeletons. The remains, believed to be about 2 million years old, reveal a creature that strode upright on long legs and had several human-like features, including its hips, pelvis, and face, but still swung through trees on ape-like arms, the New York Times reports. The creature, officially known as Australopithecus Sediba, could be an ancestor of Homo erectus, and hence humans. But it could also simply be a close side-branch, an alternate evolutionary path. Read These Next US forces board oil tanker under Trump's blockade. Trump's too late to claim trumpkennedycenter.org. Elise Stefanik drops governor's race, will leave Congress. Administration's emergency docket winning streak ends. Report an error