Over the last thirty years or so, it has become increasingly
apparent that Africa is probably the “Cradle of Mankind”. From Africa
they spread out to populate the rest of Earth. Remains of the earliest
humans were found in Oldupai Gorge.

Oldupai
Gorge (originally misnamed Olduvai) is the most famous archaeological
location in East Africa, and has become an essential visit for travelers
to Ngorongoro or Serengeti.
At Laetoli, west of Ngorongoro Crater, hominid footprints are
preserved in volcanic rock 3.6 millions years old and represent some of
the earliest signs of mankind in the world. Three separate tracks of a
small-brained upright walking early hominid. Australopithecus afarensis,
a creature about 1.2 to 1.4 meters

high, were found. Imprints of these are displayed in the Oldupai museum.
More advanced descendants of Laetoli’s hominids were found
further north, buried in the layers of the 100 meters deep Oldupai
Gorge. Excavations, mainly by the archaeologist
Louis and Mary Leakey,
yielded four different kinds of hominid, showing a gradual increases in
brain size and in the complexity of their stone tools. The first skull
of Zinjanthropus, commonly known as ‘Nutcracker Man’ who lived about
1.75 millions years ago, was found here. The most important find include
Home habilis, Zinjathropus and the Laetoli footprints.
The excavation sites have been preserved for public viewing and
work continues during the dry seasons, coordinated by the Department of
Antiquities. One may visit Oldupai at all times of the year. It is
necessary to have official guide to visit the excavations. At the top of
the Gorge there is small museum, a sheltered area used for lectures and
talks, toilets and a cultural boma. Local
Maasai souvenirs are also available.
Thus, Oldupai and Laetoli makes the Ngorongoro Conservation Area
an important place in the world for the study of human origins and human
evolution.
Discover the world as it was when we were once all African.
Visit a Modern-Day Eden.

The
Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA) - where people and their early
ancestor have co-existed with wildlife for nearly four million years.
This
World Heritage Site and
International Biosphere Reserve encompasses a spectacular mosaic of landscape that includes the breath-taking
Ngorongoro Crater
and the legendary Serengeti - the annual host of the World’s highest
concentration and diversity of migratory animals numbering nearly
two-million strong. As if this wasn’t enough, the NCA also contains two
important and internationally-known fossil and archaeological sites:
Laetoli and Olduvai Gorge. Both continue to contribute significantly to
understanding of humankind’s physical, behavioral and technological
evolution.
The Olduvai Gorge Museum and Visitors Center offer numerous
educational exhibits, including fossils and artifacts of our human
ancestors and skeletons of many extinct animals who shared their world.
There are also informative lectures, special guided archaeological sites
tours, native handcrafts and a well-stocked bookshop. See and learn
about our collective human origins when we were once all Africans.
The Laetoli Footprints: First Steps on the Road to Humankind
See and touch a huge cast of actual footprints made by our early human ancestors (hominins ) known as
Lucy"
Australopithecus afarensis.
The prints of three hominins were miraculously preserved in muddy ash
deposited by volcanic eruptions and hardened by the sun some 3.6 million
years ago.
Made by feet little different than our own, they proved
conclusively that these creatures stood and walked upright (bipedally)
with a human-like stride a million years before the invention of stone
tools and the initial growth in hominin brain size. It’s undoubtedly one
of the most astounding and important scientific discoveries of our
time.
A complete room of the Olduvai Museum devoted to the hominin footprint trail.
Walk in the Grand Canyon of Humankind
Some 30,000 years ago, splitting of the earth’s surface by
violent geological activity and millennial of erosion by seasonally
flowing streams incised the nearly 250 foot (90m) canyon known as
Olduvai Gorge. These natural forces exposed a remarkably rich geological
chronicle of human ancestry and the evolution of the Serengeti
ecosystem. It was here that
Mary and Louis Leakey
unearthed the first well-dated artifacts and fossils of some of our
earliest human ancestors after over 30 years of painstaking work. These
include the famous
Zinjanthropus (Australopithecus boisei) skull,
homo habills, the presumed maker of the numerous early stone tools in the 1.8 to 1.6 million year-old deposits, and
homo erectus, the larger bodied, larger brained hominin that preceded the earliest modern humans (
Homo sapiens).
Nightmarish Flesh-Eaters Ruled the Birth of Our Early Ancestors
Similar to modern-day East African lakes, the nearly two million
year-old paleolake Olduvai once teemed with large predators and gigantic
plant-eaters. Clearly our ancestors lived and evolved in a brutal world
where sudden death potentially lurked at every turn. They successfully
competed against such dangerous competitors by seizing an opportunity
created by large carnivores with the aid of a few sharp stones and
refuge trees.
The Upright Apes Who Changed the World
Somewhere in the East Africa’s Great Rift Valley over two million
years ago, a bipedal ape picked up two rounded fist–sized stones.
Forcibly striking one against the other, he created a sharp-edged
implement and several razor-edged stone flakes. By design or accident,
this was the world’s most important technological breakthrough because
it helped make us human. Their ability to cut open the thickest of
animal hides and process and consume the nutritious flesh and bone
marrow may have been the metabolic catalyst for increased brain size and
our successful transition from apes to humans.
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