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The Journal of the The Koobi Fora Research Project and Paleoanthropology Research in Northern Kenya

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HISTORY OF THE KFRP


A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE TURKANA BASIN

The Lake Turkana (formerly Lake Rudolf) Basin  is situated in north western Kenya and southern Ethiopia. It has been known as an important source of Neogene terrestrial vertebrate fossils since the early part of the twentieth century, but it was not until the 1960s that detailed studies were carried out both in the Ethiopian and Kenyan deposits. In 1966, Prof Bryan Patterson initiated a series of Harvard University expeditions to the region between the lower Kerio and Turkwell rivers. Patterson’s expeditions focused first on the Kanapoi region (1966-67) and subsequently on Lothagam (1967-72).

Between 1967 and 1976, the International Omo Expedition, which initially included French, American and Kenyan contingents, explored the southern Ethiopian Turkana Basin deposits. In 1968, the Kenyan contingent withdrew to prospect the Kenyan exposures on the northeastern shores of Lake Turkana. Thus began the Koobi Fora Research Project (KFRP), which has run the Kenyan Turkana Basin palaeoanthropological research since that time.

Fieldwork has been conducted in the region each year since 1968, concentrating on the eastern shores throughout the 1970s and moving to the western shores through the 1980s and 1990s. In the year 2000, the research team moved back to the western shores to continue the exploration of some of the richest and more significant sites; this initiative is ongoing. These research efforts have focused on both the eastern and western shores of Lake Turkana, and have provided an exceptional depth of understanding of the past geological and palaeoenvironmental history of the area.

The hominid fossil collection, which currently comprises several hundred specimens, has put Kenya firmly on the map as a key contributor to human evolution studies. Much of the fossil evidence for human evolution between 7 and 1 million years has been unearthed in the Turkana Basin. The hominids recovered include specimens Homo habilis, Homo rudolfensis, Homo erectus (sometimes referred to as Homo ergaster), Paranthropus boisei, Paranthropus aethiopicus, Australopithecus anamensis and Kenyanthropus platyops.


 

From the Field
The KFRP Team is once again searching for clues to our origins in Turkana. Since 1968 we have made annual expeditions to this fantastic part of Kenya in an effort to better understand how we came to be. With this online Journal you can now explore with us the fossil-rich area around Lake Turkana.

Feedback
Here's an opportunity to tell us what on your mind, and to read others' reactions to the ongoing research in Turkana and East Africa in general.

Feature Stories
An ongoing showcase of issues focusing on various aspects of Paleoanthropological research in the Turkana Basin.

Donating
Help the KFRP continue to uncover clues about our origins.

Bookstore
Books on KFRP Research, paleoanthropology, and Africa.

KFRP Merchandise
Show your support and interest in our research with some KFRP gear. Profits fund KFRP-related projects.


 


SITE PRODUCED BY  anthropus. Additional Consulting Courtesy of  Ideas, Inc.
All site content © 2004 by KFRP.COM.  All images © 2004 by Bob Campbell & the KFRP.
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