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Rare 10 million-year-old fossil unearths new view of human evolution

Rare 10 million-year-old fossil unearths new view of human evolution Near an old mining town in Central Europe, known for its picturesque turquoise-blue quarry water, lay Rudapithecus. For 10 million years, the fossilized ape waited in Rudabánya, Hungary, to add its story to the origins of how humans evolved. What Rudabánya yielded was a pelvis -- among the most informative bones of a skeleton, but one that is rarely preserved.

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10 million-year-old fossil,old mining town,Central Europe,Rudapithecus,fossilized ape,Rudabánya,Hungary,rarely preserved,pelvis,most informative bones,Carol Ward,University of Missouri,David Begun,Archaeology,professor of anthropology,University of Toronto,relative of modern African apes,Curators Distinguished Professor of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences,MU School of Medicine,American Museum of Natural History,Biological Anthropology,Ashley Hammond,

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