Abstract
There are thousands of fossils of hominins, but no fossil chimpanzee has yet been reported. The chimpanzee (Pan) is the closest living relative to humans1. Chimpanzee populations today are confined to wooded West and central Africa, whereas most hominin fossil sites occur in the semi-arid East African Rift Valley. This situation has fuelled speculation regarding causes for the divergence of the human and chimpanzee lineages five to eight million years ago. Some investigators have invoked a shift from wooded to savannah vegetation in East Africa, driven by climate change, to explain the apparent separation between chimpanzee and human ancestral populations and the origin of the unique hominin locomotor adaptation, bipedalism2,3,4,5. The Rift Valley itself functions as an obstacle to chimpanzee occupation in some scenarios6. Here we report the first fossil chimpanzee. These fossils, from the Kapthurin Formation, Kenya, show that representatives of Pan were present in the East African Rift Valley during the Middle Pleistocene, where they were contemporary with an extinct species of Homo. Habitats suitable for both hominins and chimpanzees were clearly present there during this period, and the Rift Valley did not present an impenetrable barrier to chimpanzee occupation.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution
Access options
Subscribe to this journal
Receive 51 print issues and online access
$199.00 per year
only $3.90 per issue
Buy this article
- Purchase on SpringerLink
- Instant access to full article PDF
Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout




Similar content being viewed by others
References
Ruvolo, M. E. Molecular phylogeny of the hominoids: inferences from multiple independent DNA sequence data sets. Mol. Biol. Evol. 14, 248–265 (1997)
Darwin, C. The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (John Murray, London, 1871)
Washburn, S. L. in Changing Perspectives on Man (ed. Rothblatt, B.) 193–201 (Univ. Chicago Press, Chicago, 1968)
Kortlandt, A. New Perspectives on Ape and Human Evolution (Univ. Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1972)
Pilbeam, D. & Young, N. Hominoid evolution: synthesizing disparate data. C. R. Palevol. 3, 305–321 (2004)
Coppens, Y. East side story: the origin of mankind. Sci. Am. 270, 88–95 (1994)
Martyn, J. The Geologic History of the Country Between Lake Baringo and the Kerio River, Baringo District, Kenya (PhD dissertation, Univ. London, 1969)
Tallon, P. in Geological Background to Fossil Man (ed. Bishop, W. W.) 361–373 (Scottish Academic Press, Edinburgh, 1978)
McBrearty, S., Bishop, L. C. & Kingston, J. Variability in traces of Middle Pleistocene hominid behaviour in the Kapthurin Formation, Baringo, Kenya. J. Hum. Evol. 30, 563–580 (1996)
McBrearty, S. in Late Cenozoic Environments and Hominid Evolution: a Tribute to Bill Bishop (eds Andrews, P. & Banham, P.) 143–156 (Geological Society, London, 1999)
McBrearty, S. & Brooks, A. The revolution that wasn't: a new interpretation of the origin of modern human behaviour. J. Hum. Evol. 39, 453–563 (2000)
Deino, A. & McBrearty, S. 40Ar/39Ar chronology for the Kapthurin Formation, Baringo, Kenya. J. Hum. Evol. 42, 185–210 (2002)
Leakey, M., Tobias, P. V., Martyn, J. E. & Leakey, R. E. F. An Acheulian industry with prepared core technique and the discovery of a contemporary hominid at Lake Baringo, Kenya. Proc. Prehist. Soc. 35, 48–76 (1969)
Wood, B. A. & Van Noten, F. L. Preliminary observations on the BK 8518 mandible from Baringo, Kenya. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 69, 117–127 (1986)
Renaut, R. W., Tiercelin, J.-J. & Owen, B. in Lake Basins Through Space and Time (eds Gierlowski-Kordesch, E. H. & Kelts, K. R.) 561–568 (Am. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., Tulsa, Oklahoma, 2000)
Bishop, L. C., Hill, A. P. & Kingston, J. in Late Cenozoic Environments and Hominid Evolution: a Tribute to Bill Bishop (eds Andrews, P. & Banham, P.) 99–112 (Geological Society, London, 1999)
Johanson, D. C. Some metric aspects of the permanent and deciduous dentition of the pygmy chimpanzee (Pan paniscus). Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 41, 39–48 (1974)
Dean, M. C. & Reid, D. J. Perikymata spacing and distribution on hominid anterior teeth. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 116, 209–215 (2001)
Swindler, D. R. Primate Dentition: An Introduction to the Teeth of Non-Human Primates (CUP, Cambridge, 2002)
Kinzey, W. G. in The Pygmy Chimpanzee (ed. Susman, R. L.) 65–88 (Plenum, New York, 1984)
Smith, B. H., Crummett, T. L. & Brandt, K. L. Ages of eruption of primate teeth: a compendium for aging individuals and comparing life histories. Yearb. Phys. Anthropol. 37, 177–232 (1994)
Kuykendall, K. L., Mahoney, C. J. & Conroy, G. C. Probit and survival analysis of tooth emergence ages in a mixed-longitudinal sample of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 89, 379–399 (1992)
Anemone, R. L., Watts, E. S. & Swindler, D. R. Dental development of known-age chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes (Primates, Pongidae). Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 86, 229–241 (1991)
Skinner, M. F. & Hopwood, D. Hypothesis for the causes and periodicity of repetitive linear enamel hypoplasia in large, wild African (Pan troglodytes and Gorilla gorilla) and Asian (Pongo pygmaeus) apes. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 123, 216–235 (2004)
Uchida, A. Craniodental Variation Among the Great Apes (Harvard Univ. Peabody Mus., Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1996)
Johanson, D. C. An Odontological Study of the Chimpanzee with Some Implications for Hominoid Evolution (PhD dissertation, Univ. Chicago, 1974)
Kormos, R., Boesch, C., Bakarr, M. I. & Butynski, T. M. West African Chimpanzees: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan (IUCN Publication Unit, Cambridge, 2003)
McGrew, W. C., Baldwin, P. J. & Tutin, C. E. G. Chimpanzees in a hot, dry and open habitat: Mt. Assirik, Senegal. J. Hum. Evol. 10, 227–244 (1981)
McGrew, W. C., Marchant, L. F. & Nishida, T. Great Ape Societies (CUP, Cambridge, 1996)
Kingston, J. D., Marino, B. & Hill, A. P. Isotopic evidence for Neogene hominid palaeoenvironments in the Kenya Rift Valley. Science 264, 955–959 (1994)
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank B. Kimeu, N. Kanyenze and M. Macharwas, who found the chimpanzee fossils reported here. Research in the Kapthurin Formation is carried out with the support of an NSF grant to S.M., and under a research permit from the Government of the Republic of Kenya and a permit to excavate from the Minister for Home Affairs and National Heritage of the Republic of Kenya. Both of these are issued to A. Hill and the Baringo Paleontological Research Project, an expedition conducted jointly with the National Museums of Kenya. We also thank personnel of the Departments of Palaeontology, Ornithology and Mammalogy of the National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi; A. Zihlman; and Y. Hailie-Selassie, L. Jellema and M. Ryan for curation and access to specimens. We express gratitude to A. Hill for his comments on the manuscript. We also thank G. Chaplin for drafting Fig. 1, B. Warren for preparing Figs 3 and 4, and A. Bothell for help with submission of the figures. We are grateful to J. Kelley, J. Kingston, M. Leakey, R. Leakey, C. Tryon, A. Walker and S. Ward for discussions. We thank G. Suwa for his remarks.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
Reprints and permissions information is available at npg.nature.com/reprintsandpermissions. The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
McBrearty, S., Jablonski, N. First fossil chimpanzee. Nature 437, 105–108 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04008
Received:
Accepted:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04008