The Dikika is an area of the
Afar Region of
Ethiopia. A
hominin fossil named
Selam, a specimen of the Australopithecus afarensis species, was found in this area. Papers also propose the earliest evidence of stone tool use at this site in the form of cut marks on animal bone.[1] However there has been argument about this proposal.[2][3][4] Dikika is located in
Milleworeda.[5]
Dikika is also given to name a basal member of the
Hadar formation, a series of
sedimentary rocks deposited approximately 3.4 million years ago, which have been exposed by the erosive action of the
Awash River. Although sometimes called "Lucy's Child" Dikika was in fact older than
Lucy or Dinknesh at 3.4 million years.
^Based on the map of the findsite printed in Alemseged, Z. et al. A new hominin from the Basal Member of the Hadar Formation, Dikika, and its geological context. J. Hum. Evol.49 (2005), 499–514.
Further reading
J.E. Kalb, E.B. Oswald, A. Mebrate, S. Tebedge and C. Jolly, Stratigraphy of the Awash Group, Middle Awash Valley, Afar, Ethiopia, Newsletters on Stratigraphy11 (1982), pp. 95–127.