Early Human Ancestor Ate Bark, Twigs

Anthropologists analyzing the two-million-year-old fossilized teeth of an ape-like biped have determined the pre-human creatures probably ate a diet rich in fruits, nuts, leaves and tree bark. The surprising discovery suggests these human ancestors were more like forest-dwelling chimpanzees than savannah-strolling early humans.

Anthropologists examined two fossilized teeth from a creature called Australopithecus sediba, discovered in a cave in South Africa in 2008. The fossils belong to one of several extinct hominins, or ape-like species, believed to be relatives but not direct ancestors of homo sapiens - modern humans.