
These were made when the bone was still fresh in a manner indicating ritual practice. Also of significance are cut marks on the child's skull. They show a suite of modern human traits, mixed with archaic and early modern features. Some scientists regard these fossils as a sub-species of modern humans (named Homo sapiens idàltu) because of some slight differences in their skull features. They are some of the oldest fossils of modern Homo sapiens yet discovered.

This skull from an adult male and those of another adult and a child were found in 1997 and publicly announced in 2003. Herto – a 160,000-year-old partial skull discovered in1997 in Herto, Ethiopia.

Important specimens: Early modern Homo sapiens This suggests that the Cro-Magnons had migrated from a warmer climate and had a relatively recent African ancestry. Cro-Magnon skeletons have proportions similar to those of modern Africans rather than modern Europeans. This adult male represents the oldest known skull of a modern human from western Europe.

There is, however, some difficulty in placing many of the transitional specimens into a particular species because they have a mixture of intermediate features which are especially apparent in the sizes and shapes of the forehead, brow ridge and face. African fossils provide the best evidence for the evolutionary transition from Homo heidelbergensis to archaic Homo sapiens and then to early modern Homo sapiens.
