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PhD title: Taxonomy and phylogeny of the hominins from Fejej (Ethiopia): a comparative 
analysis of cranio-dental remains 
Background 
Since 1992, the Fejej Paleoanthropological Research Project has been conducting field surveys in the 
Fejej area, located in the Omo-Turkana Basin in the far south of Ethiopia. These surveys have led to 
the discovery of several dozen Pliocene hominin remains, mainly isolated teeth and a few mandibular 
fragments. Given their age, but above all their morphology, these remains likely correspond to 
Australopithecus anamensis (4.3–3.8 Ma). Their analysis will help to expand the existing body of 
knowledge on this species, and in particular on its variation. This study will enable a broader 
discussion of the origins of the genus Australopithecus, its possible relationship with Ardipithecus 
ramidus (4.8–4.3 Ma), the links between Au. anamensis and Au. afarensis (3.8–3 Ma), and the 
possibility of intraspecific variation within Au. anamensis across the Omo-Turkana basin. 
Aims of the thesis 
1. I n-depth and comprehensive morphological and morphometric analysis of the craniodental remains 
from the Fejej area. 
2. Analysis of the contribution of Pliocene specimens from the Fejej region to the morphological and 
metric variation in the teeth of Au. anamensis, in comparison with dental variations in Ar. ramidus 
and Au. afarensis. 
3. Intra-basin comparisons of fossils from the Omo-Turkana (specimens from the south-west of the 
basin versus specimens from the north-east). 
4. Cladistic analyses. 
5. Interpretation of all the results, whether intraspecific (including any intra-basin differences) or 
interspecific, from an evolutionary perspective, incorporating available palaeoenvironmental data 
(fauna, isotopic analyses, sedimentology, etc.) available, either through intra-team discussions within 
the Fejej Paleoanthropological Research Project, or via the literature for other sites, particularly those

PhD title: Taxonomy and phylogeny of the hominins from Fejej (Ethiopia): a comparative analysis of cranio-dental remains Background Since 1992, the Fejej Paleoanthropological Research Project has been conducting field surveys in the Fejej area, located in the Omo-Turkana Basin in the far south of Ethiopia. These surveys have led to the discovery of several dozen Pliocene hominin remains, mainly isolated teeth and a few mandibular fragments. Given their age, but above all their morphology, these remains likely correspond to Australopithecus anamensis (4.3–3.8 Ma). Their analysis will help to expand the existing body of knowledge on this species, and in particular on its variation. This study will enable a broader discussion of the origins of the genus Australopithecus, its possible relationship with Ardipithecus ramidus (4.8–4.3 Ma), the links between Au. anamensis and Au. afarensis (3.8–3 Ma), and the possibility of intraspecific variation within Au. anamensis across the Omo-Turkana basin. Aims of the thesis 1. I n-depth and comprehensive morphological and morphometric analysis of the craniodental remains from the Fejej area. 2. Analysis of the contribution of Pliocene specimens from the Fejej region to the morphological and metric variation in the teeth of Au. anamensis, in comparison with dental variations in Ar. ramidus and Au. afarensis. 3. Intra-basin comparisons of fossils from the Omo-Turkana (specimens from the south-west of the basin versus specimens from the north-east). 4. Cladistic analyses. 5. Interpretation of all the results, whether intraspecific (including any intra-basin differences) or interspecific, from an evolutionary perspective, incorporating available palaeoenvironmental data (fauna, isotopic analyses, sedimentology, etc.) available, either through intra-team discussions within the Fejej Paleoanthropological Research Project, or via the literature for other sites, particularly those

The PhD student will be based at UMR 7268 ADES in Marseille, within the Bones team. 
Several periods of mobility will take place at UMR 5288 CAGT in Toulouse. 
International mobility will be necessary for data collection (Ethiopia and Kenya at a minimum), 
potential fieldwork (Ethiopia) and presentations at international meetings. Please note that funding for this PhD is not yet guaranteed at this stage. It will be subject to a 
competitive selection process within Doctoral School 251 at Aix-Marseille University (https://ecole
doctorale-251.univ-amu.fr/fr). The candidate must submit an application comprising a written 
dossier, followed by an oral interview (20 candidates for 10 funding places), which will take place on 
1 and 2 July 2026. 
Up to and including 3 May: submission of applications 
Second half of May: video conference interviews with supervisors 
End of May: selection of a candidate 
June: preparation of the application and the oral presentation with supervisors. Submission of the 
application to the DS 251 (exact date to be confirmed) 
1 and 2 July: Oral presentation before the DS 251 panel 
Applications 
CV 
To apply, please send the following to the three supervisors (francois.marchal@univ-amu.fr; 
jose.braga@utoulouse.fr; anna.echassoux@fondationiph.org) - - - - - 
Cover letter 
Transcripts for your Bachelor’s, M1 and M2 degrees, if available 
Research dissertation, if already completed 
Letters of support from your research dissertation supervisors (optional)

The PhD student will be based at UMR 7268 ADES in Marseille, within the Bones team. Several periods of mobility will take place at UMR 5288 CAGT in Toulouse. International mobility will be necessary for data collection (Ethiopia and Kenya at a minimum), potential fieldwork (Ethiopia) and presentations at international meetings. Please note that funding for this PhD is not yet guaranteed at this stage. It will be subject to a competitive selection process within Doctoral School 251 at Aix-Marseille University (https://ecole doctorale-251.univ-amu.fr/fr). The candidate must submit an application comprising a written dossier, followed by an oral interview (20 candidates for 10 funding places), which will take place on 1 and 2 July 2026. Up to and including 3 May: submission of applications Second half of May: video conference interviews with supervisors End of May: selection of a candidate June: preparation of the application and the oral presentation with supervisors. Submission of the application to the DS 251 (exact date to be confirmed) 1 and 2 July: Oral presentation before the DS 251 panel Applications CV To apply, please send the following to the three supervisors (francois.marchal@univ-amu.fr; jose.braga@utoulouse.fr; anna.echassoux@fondationiph.org) - - - - - Cover letter Transcripts for your Bachelor’s, M1 and M2 degrees, if available Research dissertation, if already completed Letters of support from your research dissertation supervisors (optional)

🚩 #PhD #joboffer #Taxonomy and #phylogeny of the #hominins from Fejej (Ethiopia): a comparative analysis of #cranio-dental remains at the UMR 7268 ADES in Marseille @univ-amu.fr
Submission of applications before 3 May
Please note that funding for this PhD is not yet guaranteed (see details ⏬)

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The Tinshemet Crossover: Breaking the Wall Between "Us" and "Them" The Levant Crossover: A New Dawn for Deep History

🦴 Breaking: Tinshemet Cave (Israel) reveals #Neanderthals & #Sapiens didn't just coexist—they SHARED a culture. From hybrid tools to hunting Persian Fallow Deer, the "Gap" is a myth. 🦌

Read my full Deep Dive: open.substack.com/pub/deephist...

#Paleoanthropology #Hominins #Evolution #Culture

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NEWSVANDAL RUNDOWN 04.06.26 Trump's Big Mouth, Iran's Resilience & Official Lies + #Iran #Easter #WarCrimes #IranWar #Israel #Lebanon #ICE #DOJ #Bannon #Fascism #Hominins #CBSNews

TODAY: Are We Great Yet? + #Iran #Easter #WarCrimes #IranWar #Israel #Lebanon #ICE #DOJ #Bannon #Fascism #Hominins #CBSNews
mailchi.mp/newsvandal/n...

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2.6-million-year-old Paranthropus fossil expands early hominin range In a paper published in Nature, a team led by University of Chicago paleoanthropologist Professor Zeresenay Alemseged reports the discovery of the first Paranthropus specimen from the Afar region of E...

Paranthropus fossil expands hominin range phys.org/news/2026-01... #FossilFriday #hominins #archaeology

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Color photo of a roll of birch bark, a puddle of tar, and a spear with birch tar securing the point.

Color photo of a roll of birch bark, a puddle of tar, and a spear with birch tar securing the point.

Never mind Band-Aids, Neanderthals had antiseptic birch tar

Our view of Neanderthal life keeps getting more complex and vibrant […]

[Original post on faithcollapsing.com]

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Earliest Human Remains Outside Africa Were Just Discovered in Israel If accepted as Homo sapien, the jaw-dropping jawbone would push back the human exodus out of Africa by nearly 100,000 years

#evolution #Africa #diaspora #hominins

www.smithsonianmag.com/science-natu...

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Never mind Band-Aids, Neanderthals had antiseptic birch tar https://arstechni.ca #ancientpeopledidstuff #paleoanthropology #herbalremedies #anthropology #Neanderthals #antibiotics #Archaeology #hominins #Science

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Curtis, Swisher and Lewin’s Java Man of 2000: Hominin-Themed Books, Part 1 — Tetrapod Zoology If you were following the hominin-themed discoveries of that long-ago era known as the 1990s, you may well remember the hot news, published in Science in 1994 and 1996, on Homo erectus …

This article is the second in my series on palaeoanthropological books. The previous one was devoted to Curtis, Swisher and Lewin’s Java Man of 2000 and you can find it here... tetzoo.com/blog/2025/3/... #books #hominids #hominins

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Mary Leakey’s 1984 Disclosing the Past: Hominin-Themed Books, Part 2 — Tetrapod Zoology It’s probably impossible to write about the history of fossil hominin discoveries in Africa and not discuss, or at least mention, the Leakeys…

Anyway -- there is tons more to say, but the good news is that you can learn about Mary her book at this new article. I really enjoyed the book and you might too, if you share interests with me... tetzoo.com/blog/2026/3/... #hominids #hominins #books

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Post image Post image Post image Post image

My personal Collection of variously aquired and sourced fossil hominin and great ape crania 3d scans and 3d replicas.
#fossils #hominins #primatology #paleontology #paleoanthropology #Blender

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"Million-year-old" fossil skulls from China are far older—and not Denisovans The revised age may help make sense of 2-million-year-old stone tools elsewhere in China.

#science #anthropology #hominins

This is interesting. Clears up Hominin history somewhat.

arstechnica.com/science/2026...

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This 67,800-year-old hand stencil is the world's oldest human-made art https://arstechni.ca #humanmigration #anthropology #Archaeology #australia #Indonesia #hominins #Science #caveart #rockart #science #Sahul

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95% Direct Traffic: What It Really Means for Platform Success. A Deep Dive into aéPiot's Exceptional User Loyalty Metrics. 95% Direct Traffic: What It Really Means for Platform Success A Deep Dive into aéPiot's Exceptional User Loyalty Metrics Publication Dat...

better-experience.blogspot.com/2026/01/95-d...

#EARLY #EXPANSIONS OF #HOMININS #OUT OF #AFRICA
aepiot.com/advanced-sea...
#TORNE #FINNISH #AND #SWEDISH #RIVER
multi-search-tag-explorer.allgraph.ro/advanced-sea...
1940 41 #DIVISION 3
multi-search-tag-explorer.aepiot.ro/advanced-sea...
aepiot.ro

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Original post on mastodon.social

7-Jan-2026
Early #hominins from #Morocco reveal an African lineage near the root of #HomoSapiens
773,000-year-old fossils from Thomas Quarry I in Morocco illuminate the shared ancestry of Homo sapiens, #Neanderthals, and #Denisovans

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1111525

#science […]

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Sahelanthropus tchadensis may have been bipedal 7 million years ago An article published in the journal 'Science Advances' reports the results of a study concluding that Sahelanthropus tchadensis was capable of walking on two...

#paleontology #paleoanthropology #fossils #hominins #bipedalism #Sahelanthropus tchadensis may have been bipedal 7 million years ago english.netmassimo.com/2026/01/09/s...

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Fossils point to common ancestor of modern humans, Neanderthals Bones from a Moroccan quarry belonged to a hominin that lived when the human lineage was splitting

#evolution
#hominins

Out of Africa

Fossils dating back to ≈773k years ago, discovered in Casablanca, may belong to the most recent common ancestor of Neanderthals, Denisovans, and H. sapiens.

science.org/content/arti...

OA paper: www.nature.com/articles/s41...

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We have a fossil closer to our split with Neanderthals and Denisovans https://arstechni.ca #paleoanthropology #humanevolution #anthropology #Neanderthals #Archaeology #homoerectus #Denisovans #hominins #Science

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What “Deep History” Actually Means (and Why It Matters) Why do we study History?

Check out my first post on Substack!

We wil be exploring #DeepHistory, #Archaeology, #Anthropology all things #RockArt, #AnceintHistory, #Hominins; and so much more!:

Subscribe for free today!

//open.substack.com/pub/deephistory/p/what-deep-history-actually-means?r=130qwl&utm_medium=ios

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Were Humans in the Philippines 709,000 Years Ago? No. Modern humans (Homo sapiens) were not in the Philippines 709,000 years ago. Evidence from the Kalinga site on Luzon shows that hominins, likely a premodern human species, butchered a rhinoceros there about 709,000 years ago using simple stone tools, but the species is unknown and was almost certainly not Homo sapiens (Ingicco et al., Nature 2018). Homo sapiens did not evolve until roughly 300,000 years ago…

709,000 years ago on Luzon, but not modern humans: artifacts point to earlier hominins. How do scientists piece together island migrations from bone and stone? #Archaeology #Hominins #Kalinga #Luzon #Philippines

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MultiSearch Tag Explorer MultiSearch Tag Explorer - Explore tags and search results by aéPiot

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#WHEN #THE #MOON #WAS #FULL
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an artist’s impression showing people gathered around a campfire, with one standing to address the others

an artist’s impression showing people gathered around a campfire, with one standing to address the others

This is the oldest evidence of people starting fires

We didn’t start the fire. ❲Neanderthals did, at least 400,000 years ago.❳…


arstechnica.com/science/2025/12/this-is-... #firestarting #hominins #making-fire #neanderthals #science

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an artist’s impression showing people gathered around a campfire, with one standing to address the others

an artist’s impression showing people gathered around a campfire, with one standing to address the others

This is the oldest evidence of people starting fires

We didn’t start the fire. ❲Neanderthals did, at least 400,000 years ago.❳…


https://s.faithcollapsing.com/fu001#archaeology #firestarting #hominins #making-fire #neanderthals #science




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Homo floresiensis may have become extinct due to climate change An article published in the journal 'Communications Earth & Environment' reports a study that offers a possible explanation for the extinction of the...

#paleontology #paleoanthropology #fossils #hominins Homo floresiensis may have become extinct due to climate change english.netmassimo.com/2025/12/11/h...

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This is the oldest evidence of people starting fires https://arstechni.ca #firestarting #Neanderthals #Archaeology #makingfire #hominins #Science #science

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The Burtele Foot and Other Fossils Reveal How Two Hominin Species Thrived Side by Side Unassigned bones from Ethiopia, combined with teeth and jaw finds, show how two ancient hominin species thrived on different diets and ways of moving 3.4 million years ago.

The Burtele Foot and Other Fossils Reveal How Two Hominin Species Thrived Side by Side #Science #Biology #EvolutionaryBiology #Hominins #FossilRecords #EvolutionaryStudies

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Shifting Landscapes, Shifting Lineages: What a Half-Century of Fossils from the Omo–Turkana Basin Is Telling Us Now A new synthesis of more than 1,200 fossils reframes one of paleoanthropology’s most important regions, revealing uneven histories of discovery, shifting ecological windows, and a surprisingly complex.

New synthesis of 1,200+ fossils from the Omo–Turkana Basin reveals uneven timelines, shifting habitats, and a richer early Homo record than expected. A landmark recalibration of a key region in human evolution. #Paleoanthropology #HumanOrigins #Archaeology #Hominins

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How Our Human Lineage Broke All the Rules of Vertebrate Evolution New study challenges traditional views on human evolution with "bizarre" findings.
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What is the Neanderthal?
What is the Neanderthal? YouTube video by World of Paleoanthropology

"What is the #Neanderthal" - Have you always wondered, or had questions about this enigmatic species? Hear from some of the world's top experts soon just who these #hominins were! www.youtube.com/watch?v=0cnY...

You wont find such content anywhere else! Subscribe, Like and above all -Learn!

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10,000 generations of hominins used the same stone tools to weather a changing world https://arstechni.ca #australopithecus #paleoarchaeology #Archaeology #stonetools #hominins #Science #oldowan #science

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Early Hominins Perfected a Stone Tool That Survived 300,000 Years of Climate Chaos Learn how early hominins crafted the same sharp-edged Oldowan tools through 300,000 years of climate change, revealing one of the longest-lasting technologies in human history.

Early Hominins Perfected a Stone Tool That Survived 300,000 Years of Climate Chaos #Science #Biology #EvolutionaryBiology #Hominins #StoneTools #ClimateChange

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