The Taung child fossil, discovered 100 years ago, "put Africa on the map," Rebecca Rogers Ackermann, professor in the Department of Archaeology at the University of Cape Town, told Sputnik Africa.
"In terms of human evolution, before that, there hadn't been any truly old early human ancestors because the Taung child is over 2.5 million years old," she said.
According to her, the global community initially rejected the idea of human origins in Africa due to prevailing racism. However, subsequent discoveries in East Africa gradually normalized the concept, leading to the recognition of Africa as the cradle of humanity, Ackermann stated.
Because of racism, Europeans didn't want to believe that Africa was the origin of humanity, the archeologist said.
Science is always influenced by its historical context, leading to inherent biases, Ackermann stated, stressing the importance of recognizing and being aware of these biases when evaluating scientific work.
"One of the ways to deal with that is to make sure that you have a diversity of perspectives, a diversity of team members, because, you know, what happened in the past is that because it was such a homogenous group of people that were doing the science, they all kind of saw the world in a similar way," she said.
The archeologist also pointed out the need for "more indigenous leaders" in paleoanthropology."
The current research structure, which often favors overseas leadership and funding, should proactively train and integrate African researchers as genuine collaborators from the outset of projects, Ackermann said, suggesting one of the approaches to increase the number of African authors in paleoanthropology.
The second approach, according to her, involves cooperation between African institutions involved in paleoanthropological research. Ackermann said that historical factors have prevented such collaborations in the past.
"Making connections between institutions in South Africa, between South African institutions and institutions in Eastern Africa that have these sorts of fossils, who curate these fossils of human evolution, is essential in order to strengthen those networks as well," the archeologist said.
South Africa's paleoanthropological and archaeological remains, found in caves, shelters, and open-air sites, date mainly to the Quaternary period but also the late Pliocene. The Cradle of Humankind is the primary location within the Fossil Hominid Sites of South Africa UNESCO World Heritage Site.