Prof Lee R Berger
@leerberger.bsky.social
510 followers 600 following 130 posts
Explorer in Residence, The National Geographic Society https://explorers.nationalgeographic.org/directory/lee-r-berger#c1af6ba3-0859-41e9-a4d6-6b3491785ea8
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leerberger.bsky.social
Like our team, you get to be the first people in almost 2 million years to see the whole palate of the Holotype of Australopithecus sediba exposed - thanks Zandile!
leerberger.bsky.social
Very excited about new photographic scales from @nationalgeographic.bsky.social for archeologists, palaeontologists, photographers, geologists and forensic scientists! First Nat Geo Society scales ever! Enjoy!
leerberger.bsky.social
A fantastic interview on eNCA news with Tebogo Makhubela celebrating his National Geographic #Wayfinder award! Well deserved and enjoy listening to the future of human origins research in #Africa - Tebogo is active on LinkedIn under Tebogo Vincent Makhubela follow him! www.enca.com/videos/wayfi...
leerberger.bsky.social
I am proud to know you! Welcome to the yellow border, welcome to the family and sharing many great explorations, discoveries, scientific endeavours and moments of fun long into the future. Well done! Never Stop Exploring www.goodthingsguy.com/people/sa-sc... @nationalgeographic.bsky.social
SA Scientist Named National Geographic Explorer for Fossil Research
Dr Tebogo Makhubela has been named a National Geographic Explorer and recipient of the 2025 Wayfinder Award, putting South African
www.goodthingsguy.com
Reposted by Prof Lee R Berger
Reposted by Prof Lee R Berger
johnhawks.net
So many connections between star knowledge and ancient societies. Some have been embodied in monuments like Stonehenge, but the knowledge of they sky and its relation to natural and social cycles is vastly older.

www.johnhawks.net/p/when-did-o...
When did our ancestors start looking up to the stars?
Changes in the sky have been important to peoples throughout the world. That connection may go back much further than our species.
www.johnhawks.net
leerberger.bsky.social
Well work on making that clearer in the final product
leerberger.bsky.social
So there are not many changes at all as it’s a series of chert ledges and dolomitic struts. I would suggest if anything it’s “easier” today than it was. It’s very hard to create understanding of such a space without “being there” and we really do sympathize with misconceptions
leerberger.bsky.social
Humans go to a great deal of unnecessary effort to carry/take/move their dead to their place of rest. Is it really that odd another species might care/love a much to go to great efforts?
leerberger.bsky.social
One thing that bugs me is why we seem to miscommunicate that whatever entrance(s) there were it doesn’t matter. It had to be so restrictive that pretty much only naledi got in. We seem to have failed to get that to sink in but it’s important
leerberger.bsky.social
So the dragons back block doesn’t work the way you draw it. It doesn’t “block” the chute labyrinth area - that is a separate space. And it didn’t “fall” far so it’s not a “cork” so to speak, in a way our earlier writings perhaps didn’t make clear. There was never a “walk in” entrance if you will.
leerberger.bsky.social
Before Keneiloe Molopyane jumped into the work at Gladysvale - I did this video during Covid about the history behind this interesting site - good things are soon to be seen from the latest work at this site! www.wits.ac.za/news/latest-...
2020-05 - The impact of Gladysvale - Wits University
www.wits.ac.za
leerberger.bsky.social
Take a look at this beautiful mandible from Swartrkans in South Africa - Skw 5. It’s what we presently call a Paranthropus robustus. Notice the “robust” mandible, large teeth and molarization of the premolars. What a lovely specimen of an ancient hominin likely between 1.5 and 2 million years old!