Your Travel and Tour Company "To Ethiopia"

Your Travel and Tour Company "To Ethiopia" To Ethiopia, a truly Ethiopian travel and tour company with its head quarter in Addis Ababa providing international standard tourism and travel services.

A travel and tour company whose main base is in Addis Ababa with its headquarter in Europe.

Ethiopia, The Land of Origins!Rare 3.8-million-year-old skull recasts origins of iconic ‘Lucy’ fossilAncient cranium dis...
30/08/2019

Ethiopia, The Land of Origins!

Rare 3.8-million-year-old skull recasts origins of iconic ‘Lucy’ fossil

Ancient cranium discovered in Ethiopia suggests early hominin evolutionary tree is messier than we thought.

An ancient face is shedding new light on our earliest ancestors. Archaeologists have discovered a 3.8-million-year-old hominin skull in Ethiopia — a rare and remarkably complete specimen that could change what we know about the origins of one of humanity’s most famous ancestors, Lucy.

The researchers who discovered the skull say it belongs to a species called Australopithecus anamensis, and it gives scientists their first good look at the face of this hominin. This species was thought to precede Lucy’s species, Australopithecus afarensis. But features of the latest find now suggest that A. anamensis shared the prehistoric Ethiopian landscape with Lucy’s species for at least 100,000 years, the researchers say. This hints that the early hominin evolutionary tree was more complicated than scientists had thought — but other researchers say the evidence isn’t yet conclusive.

“Fossil hominin crania are exceptionally rare treasures,” says Carol Ward, a palaeoanthropologist at the University of Missouri in Columbia who wasn’t involved in the analysis. “This to me is the specimen we have been waiting for.” An analysis of the skull is published in Nature1 .

Exceptionally preserved
A. afarensis lived in East Africa between about 4 million and 3 million years ago. It is important to the understanding of human evolution because it might have been the ape-like species from which the ‘true’ human genus, Homo, evolved about 2.8 million years ago. Over the past few decades, researchers have discovered dozens of fragments of australopithecine fossils in Ethiopia and Kenya that date back more than 4 million years. Most researchers think these older fossils belong to the earlier species, A. anamensis. It’s generally thought that A. anamensis gradually morphed into A. afarensis, implying that the two species never coexisted.

The 3.8-million-year-old hominin skull, discovered at a site called Woranso-Mille in Ethiopia, now suggests otherwise. A team of palaeoanthropologists led by Yohannes Haile-Selassie at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History in Ohio discovered the specimen — called the MRD cranium — in 2016.

Features of the fossil’s teeth and jaws suggest that it belongs to A. anamensis. That’s an important conclusion because, until now, researchers had found only a few fragments of A. anamensis skulls.

“The preservation of the specimen really is exceptional,” says Stephanie Melillo, a palaeoanthropologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, who was involved in the latest work. The skull was found in just two large pieces, which she says is unfathomably unlikely for a specimen of this age. “We just got really lucky with this find.”

Coexistence?
The find makes it possible to reassess other australopith facial fossils, including a 3.9-million-year-old forehead fragment found in Ethiopia in the 1980s. Until now it wasn’t clear whether this fragment belonged to A. afarensis or A. anamensis. But now the researchers have been able to show that the fragment has features that are seen in younger A. afarensis skulls but are absent in the MRD cranium. Assuming the forehead fragment belonged to an A. afarensis individual, and the MRD cranium to an A. anamensis individual, the researchers suggest that the two species may have coexisted in the region for 100,000 years or more.

Haile-Selassie and his colleagues say it’s still likely that Lucy’s species evolved from A. anamensis. But they think it did so through a ‘speciation event’: perhaps a small group of A. anamensis became genetically isolated from the general population and evolved into A. afarensis, which eventually outcompeted the wider A. anamensis population.

Melillo admits that arguing for a local speciation event rather than the gradual transformation of the entire population might seem like splitting hairs, but she says that understanding exactly how hominin species evolved is a crucial first step to unravelling why they evolved the way they did.

Some researchers are ready to consider the possibility that A. afarensis and A. anamensis coexisted. “It’s a very interesting claim,” says David Strait, a palaeoanthropologist at Washington University in St Louis, Missouri.

But both Strait and Ward think the evidence isn’t conclusive yet, because it rests heavily on just two fossils — the MRD cranium and the forehead fragment discovered in the 1980s. Strait thinks future fossil finds might help to firm up the idea.

Hominin neighbours
Tim White, a palaeoanthropologist at the University of California, Berkeley, thinks that with such limited evidence it’s far too soon to revise our understanding of Lucy’s origins. But he says that it is becoming more common for researchers to argue that there were two or more hominin species coexisting at any given point over the past several million years.

Haile-Selassie thinks that multiple hominin species did coexist between 3 million and 4 million years ago, and not just because of the MRD cranium. In 2012, he and his colleagues described a 3.4-million-year-old hominin fossil foot from Woranso-Mille with an opposable big toe. That’s a feature not seen in the hominins known to be alive at the time, implying that the foot belonged to a mysterious but distinct species that shared the landscape.

“The discoveries from the Woranso-Mille site have clearly demonstrated to me that there were multiple early hominin species,” says Haile-Selassie.

Ancient cranium discovered in Ethiopia suggests early hominin evolutionary tree is messier than we thought.

01/12/2018

Top African Airlines with number of aircraft in service (2010-2018).

30/10/2018

Ethiopia's Visa-on-Arrival to Start on November 9, 2018 (http://taxpl.us/VisaOnArrival)

A hint from the Prime Minister in May 2018, then a confirmation of implementation by erstwhile president. In between both, the country began issuing visas online to tourists.

Finally, Ethiopia has announced a date for the start of a visa-on-arrival regime for all Africans. Africa’s second most populous nation will start visa-on arrival regime from November 9, 2018, PM Abiy Ahmed’s chief of staff confirmed on Friday.

According to Fitsum Aregaa, the current move is: “Consistent with PM Abiy Ahmed’s vision of a closer and full regional integration in Africa — where minds are open to ideas and markets are open to trade.”

Abiy had earlier this year disclosed that following Rwanda’s lead, Ethiopia was going to allow a visa-free regime for all Africans. At the time, he was speaking at a state banquet held for his visiting Rwandan counterpart, Paul Kagame.

Abiy said: “The President (Kagame) invited all Africans to travel to Rwanda without visas, we will follow you very soon.” On June 1 the issuance of visas online for all tourists kick started.

Ethiopia boasts the continent’s best national carrier, Ethiopian Airlines, which has made the Bole International Airport in Addis Ababa, not just a regional but global aviation hub.

The most recent time the issue was came up was when ex-president Mulatu Teshome at the opening of parliament said the visa-on-arrival regime was to be implemented in this year.

http://taxpl.us/VisaOnArrival

Ethiopian first direct flight   Ababa to   just landed. Congratulations.
08/06/2018

Ethiopian first direct flight Ababa to just landed. Congratulations.

Mountain gorilla numbers have increased 10% in recent years. They now number over 1000. For a species that was virtually...
02/06/2018

Mountain gorilla numbers have increased 10% in recent years. They now number over 1000. For a species that was virtually extinct, this is great news and proved that the battle for conservation is not lost provided humans are prepared to fight for wildlife survival.

Mountain gorilla numbers have increased 10% in recent years. They now number over 1000. For a species that was virtually extinct, this is great news and proves that the battle for conservation is not lost provided humans are prepared to fight for wildlife survival.

BEWARE!!! Right from the outset there already are other fraudulent websites. These websites...https://www.ethiopiaonline...
02/06/2018

BEWARE!!!

Right from the outset there already are other fraudulent websites. These websites...

https://www.ethiopiaonlinevisa.com/
https://www.evisaforethiopia.com/
https://www.ethiopiaevisa.com/
(and there may be more others)

ARE NOT websites of the government of Ethiopia nor recognized by the government of Ethiopia to process visa. Please, avoid. The only official e-Visa website is

https://www.evisa.gov.et/ #/home

Note: the domain name ends with a .GOV.ET which portrays that it is an official website of the government of Ethiopia.

THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT ETHIOPIAN EVISAon the official Ethiopian e-Visa website https://www.evisa.gov.et/ #/home1. ...
02/06/2018

THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT ETHIOPIAN EVISA
on the official Ethiopian e-Visa website https://www.evisa.gov.et/ #/home

1. e-Visa application fees are not refundable
2. Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months from the date you intend to enter Ethiopia.
3. Currently, travelers with e-Visa to enter Ethiopia via Addis Ababa Bole International Airport are allowed. Entry via other ports of entry is not allowed.
4. The validity of Ethiopian e-Visa starts from the date you intend to enter Ethiopia not from date of issue.
5. Please carefully read and comply to the important notices and guidelines stated in each step of the application form.
6. Currently single entry tourist visas and conference visas only are being issued.

https://www.evisa.gov.et/ #/home

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Taytu Hotel
Addis Ababa

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