This is the old home place. It’s changed quite a bit since my folks left it a long time ago.
We think they lived here. The story has gotten kind of foggy in the last three million years or so. The old home place actually could be in one of several places in Africa. Cousin Lucy, for example, was living in nearby Ethiopia 3.2 million years ago.
This is Oldupai Gorge. “Oldupai” is a Masai word. This place usually is called “Olduvai” Gorge because a German butterfly hunter named Wilhelm Kattwinkel stumbled on this place in 1911, and asked the Masai people who live in the area what the place was called. They thought he was referring to a plant that flourishes there, the Oldupai, and he misunderstood what they said and furthermore mispronounced it and the gorge has been stuck with Olduvai ever since..
That’s the Oldupai plant growing outside the museum. The more formal name is Blue Sansevierra or Sword Sansevierra. It has a tuxedo-formal name but let’s just leave it at being a Sansevierra plant. The old timers such as Uncle Nutcracker Man used it for all kinds of things, much like a more modern people in this country we erroneously call the Anasazi used Yucca plants.
The Masai have used it for clothing, or thread for sewing. They use it to fix problems with leather products. They make the fibers of it into rope. It’s also good for baskets and roofs. And bandages. In fact it has a natural antiseptic quality. Almost fifty years ago one of the scientists working in the gorge used the plant for a natural bandage over an injury. It worked so well that he went into pharmaceutical research with it. And cattle like it during the dry season.
Oldupai Gorge is a thirty-mile long feature of the Great Rift Valley—as some call it—which is an area of tectonic activity that eventually will produce a rift deep enough for water to flow into it, splitting this part of eastern Africa away from the main continent. Don’t worry about it. It will happen long after you have been there and have returned safely.
The Leakey family, starting in the 1930s, found fossils here that started to rewrite the human evolutionary record. They found in soil layers about three-hundred feet deep four kinds of hominids, each showing an increase in brain size. In related levels, they found increasingly sophisticated stone tools.
For a few minutes we were face to face with old Uncle Nut, as we like to call him. He originally was named Zinjanthropus boisei. Well, we don’t know what his contemporaries called him, assuming they had names for each other 1.84 million years ago. The Leakeys gave him that name and then they changed it after deciding he was part of the Paranthropus genus. He gained the nickname “Nutcracker Man” because he had small incisors and large molars that led the Leakeys to think he fed on grains, nuts and seeds. Later studies have revealed he lived on grass and leaves.
How do we know that Uncle Nut should actually be Uncle Grass? A Smithsonian article in June of 2012 says there was another Paranthropus genus in another part of Africa. And an analysis of the fossilized teeth of Paranthropus robustus, who lived in South Africa suggest he was the one who ate hard foods. Chemical tests of robustus’ enamel, indicates as much as sixty percent of their diet was fruit and hard-shelled nuts. Imagine that—there’s enough food residue on those teeth after almost two-million years that scientists can figure out what their diet was.
Uncle Nut, P. bosei in scientific terms, had a bigger jaw and the biggest molars of any hominid found up to 2012, indicating that species was a strong chewer. At the time, eastern Africa was open grasslands and woods, much different from southern Africa. But Uncle Nut’s molars don’t have the pitting one might find in animals that eat hard objects. Carbon isotopes from his teeth also show as much as 77 percent of his diet was sedges and grasses. The study of the teeth also indicates the area of Oldupai Gorge was quite a bit different from the arid area it seems to be today.
So Uncle Nut was a vegetarian, a trait that hasn’t crossed to this particular possible descendent in the millennia since. This possible descendant is a confirmed carnivore. If there’s going to be pizza, let’s make it a meat lover’s pizza.
To be clear, we call him “uncle,” but he might be more of a cousin. Some scientists say the Paranthropus genus is an offspring of Australopithecus, the line that they think led to Homo erectus and then to Homo sapiens, which is us.
Frankly, I don’t see much of a family resemblance in the pictures at the museum but as time went by and as his descendants and contemporaries moved throughout Africa and then later into what we call “The Holy Land” and ultimately into northern Europe or along the Mediterranean seacoast—and the rest of the world—they gained some new looks.
Now, we realize some who read this chronicle disagree with the whole evolution thing. That’s okay. But Nancy and I have let National Geographic analyze some of our spit and our DNA shows we might have had some relatives in common with Nutcracker Man or at least some of his contemporaries.
Things are pretty up-to-date in ancient Oldupai or Olduvai Gorge. Power lines are not strung across national parks to reach this place. Tanzania is big on what we call alternative energy. Hydropower. Solar power. And wind. There is oil but it’s under some areas that are too precious, not to mention too dangerous, for drillers. And we hope it is always so. If the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge had some of the critters lying in the grass that we saw in the nearby Serengeti National Park, there would be no controversy about drilling for oil there as there does not seem to be, so far, at Oldupai. It’s not wise to drill for oil in an area where the drillers are considered food.
Just before we headed to Africa, I started reading Yuval Noah Harari’s book, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. He writes that at least seven different kinds of Sapiens eventually evolved from areas like the Gorge. But we, Homo sapiens, have survived and we’ve done it by eliminating the others. We have been the lone human species for the last twelve-thousand years and that, he says, has left us arrogant but uncertain.
“We are more powerful than ever before, but have very little idea what to do with all that power. Worse still, humans seem to be more irresponsible than ever. Self-made gods with only the laws of physics to keep us company, we are accountable to no one. We are consequently wreaking havoc on our fellow animals and on the surrounding ecosystem, seeking little more than our own comfort and amusement, yet never finding satisfaction. Is there anything more dangerous than dissatisfied and irresponsible gods who don’t know what they want?”
A group of Homo sapiens gods from a place their kind call Missouri looked down into an ancient gorge that day, the place where Paranthropus bosei ate grass and leaves in what they call Tanzania, African-Americans many generations removed visiting the old home place.