Little Foot May Represent a Brand-New Hominin Species, Not Australopithecus afarensis or africanus, Australian Study Finds.lh

Little Foot May Represent a Brand-New Hominin Species, Not Australopithecus afarensis or africanus, Australian Study Finds

A December 2025 study in the American Journal of Biological Anthropology has upended decades of debate: the iconic “Little Foot” skeleton (StW 573) from South Africa’s Sterkfontein Caves is unlikely to belong to Australopithecus afarensis, A. africanus, or even the controversial A. prometheus. Led by Dr. Jesse Martin of La Trobe University, the international team concludes it may instead represent a previously unknown species of human ancestor.

Discovered between 1994 and 1998 and painstakingly excavated over 20 years, Little Foot is the most complete Australopithecus skeleton ever found—over 90% preserved and dated to approximately 3.67 million years ago. Martin’s exhaustive morphological comparison of the skull, teeth, and postcranial skeleton found that Little Foot shares no unique suite of features with any named species. “We think it is demonstrably not A. afarensis, A. africanus, or A. prometheus,” Martin stated. “This is more likely a previously unidentified human relative.”

The implications are profound. Sterkfontein already documents multiple hominin lineages coexisting in southern Africa. Adding a third distinct form at 3.67 Ma would expand early hominin diversity and force a re-examination of branching patterns in the human family tree. A companion 2026 virtual reconstruction of the face further highlights unexpected affinities with East African specimens.

Little Foot has once again rewritten the script of human origins—this time by revealing a face we may never have met before.