Drimolen
The Drimolen Palaeocave System consists of a series of terminal Pliocene to early Pleistocene hominin-bearing palaeocave fills located around north of Johannesburg, South Africa, and about north of Sterkfontein in the UNESCO World Heritage Site Cradle of Humankind.
History of Research
Conventionally it is considered that the site was discovered on 9 July 1992 by Andre Keyser, however Murray Obbes, who was conducting field survey as part of his masters projects at the Rand Afrikaans University claims to have found the site and showed it and the fossils to Keyser. Either way Andre Keyser directed excavations at the site until his death in 2010.- On 21 October 1994, Keyser discovered the DNH 7 skull, the most complete Paranthropus robustus skull found. It is also considered a rare female skull of P. robustus. DNH 8, a male mandible called "Orpheus" was also discovered at the same time and adjacent to DNH 7.
These include the University of Florence, Italy, the University of Victoria, Canada, and La Trobe University, Australia.
The permit and excavations at the site were taken over by Stephanie Baker of the Palaeo-Research Institute University of Johannesburg in 2017 in collaboration with Prof. Andy I.R. Herries of La Trobe University as part of an Australian Research Council Discovery Project.
This also involves collaborations with David Strait of Washington University in St Louis, who runs a US based field school at Drimolen every June, as well as researchers from South Africa, Australia, the US and Italy.
Drimolen Main Quarry (DMQ)
All the hominin remains have been recovered from the classic area of the site known as the Drimolen Main Quarry, and include remains of Paranthropus robustus, early Homo and Homo erectus- In 2015 a partial cranium of Homo erectus was discovered by La Trobe University Archaeology Field School student Richard Curtis. The cranium represents an individual that was around 2–3 years old and has a reconstructed cranial capacity of 484 to 593 cm3, making it only very slightly smaller than the proposed adult female Homo erectus cranium DAN5/P1 from Gona in Ethiopia. The cranium has nicknamed "Simon" after one of the Drimolen excavation team, Simon Mokobane, who died in 2018.
- On South African Father's Day 2018 a partial cranium of Paranthropus robustus was discovered by field school student Samantha Good. The cranium is an adult male and is the most complete male cranium of the species discovered. The cranium was published in 2020 and was argued to represent an earlier part of the P. robustus lineage when compared to younger fossils from the nearby Swartkrans Member 1 Hanging Remnant, thus documenting microevolution within P. robustus
DMQ has also yielded some of the world's oldest bone tools and some of South Africa's oldest stone tools. It is also the first site in the region to have yielded two species of Dinofelis in the same deposit, Dinofelis cf. barlowi and Dinofelis aff. piveteaui.''.'' Many of the species at the site are either the first or last appearance of the species in the region and suggest a significant faunal turnover at the time.
Drimolen Makondo (DMK)
In 2013, a new fossil deposit was discovered around away from the Main Quarry that is known as the Drimolen Makondo. DMK has not yielded any hominin remains but has been dated to a much older time period around 2.61 Ma, making it similar in age to sites such as Sterkfontein Member 4 and parts of the Makapansgat Limeworks.While DMQ consists of a single large palaeocavern, DMK consists of a series of interconnecting, low maze-like passages. It is not known how the two caves relate to each other and whether they were once part of the same interconnected cave system, but basal speleothems in each deposit have been dated by uranium-lead to ≈2.6 million years ago, the same age as flowstones underlying the Australopithecus africanus bearing Sterkfontein Member 4 and capping the A. africanus bearing Makapansgat Limeworks Member 3 deposits.