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Lucy is an early australopithecine and is dated to about 3. The skeleton presents a small skull akin to that of non-hominin apes , plus evidence of a walking-gait that was bipedal and upright, akin to that of humans and other hominins ; this combination supports the view of human evolution that bipedalism preceded increase in brain size. Lucy was named by Pamela Alderman after the song " Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds " by the Beatles , which was played loudly and repeatedly in the expedition camp all evening after the excavation team's first day of work on the recovery site.
Lucy became famous worldwide, and the story of her discovery and reconstruction was published in a book by Johanson and Edey. Beginning in , the fossil assembly and associated artefacts were exhibited publicly in an extended six-year tour of the United States; the exhibition was called Lucy's Legacy: The Hidden Treasures of Ethiopia.
There was discussion of the risks of damage to the unique fossils, and other museums preferred to display casts of the fossil assembly. Ever since the development of evolutionary theory in the early 19th century, biologists recognized that humans must be distantly related to all other species. Without transitional fossils , scientists presumed that humans' closest relatives were the great apes. They also assumed the first traits to evolve after speciation related to intelligence : big brains , tool use , and complex language.
In the s, Raymond Dart discovered the Taung child. That skeleton seemed bipedal unlike chimps , but lacked skull space for a powerful brain. Without further data to contextualize Dart's find, anthropologists could not prove whether bipedality, intelligence, or some other trait had first distinguished proto-humans from their great ape relatives.