thumb|The DNH 7 Paranthropus robustus skull from DMQ, the most complete skull of this species ever discovered and a rare female example. The Drimolen Palaeocave System consists of a series of terminal Pliocene to early Pleistocene hominin-bearing palaeocave fills located around north of Johannesburg, South Africa, and about north of Sterkfontein in the UNESCO World Heritage Site Cradle of Humankind.
thumb|The DNH 7 Paranthropus robustus skull from DMQ, the most complete skull of this species ever discovered and a rare female example. The Drimolen Palaeocave System consists of a series of terminal Pliocene to early Pleistocene hominin-bearing palaeocave fills located around north of Johannesburg, South Africa, and about north of Sterkfontein in the UNESCO World Heritage Site Cradle of Humankind.
==History of Research== Conventionally it is considered that the site was discovered on 9 July 1992 by Andre Keyser, however Murray Obbes, who was conducting field survey as part of his masters projects at the Rand Afrikaans University (now the University of Johannesburg) claims to have found the site and showed it and the fossils to Keyser. Either way Andre Keyser directed excavations at the site until his death in 2010. On 21 October 1994, Keyser discovered the DNH 7 (Eurydice) skull, the most complete Paranthropus robustus skull found. It is also considered a rare female skull of P. robustus. DNH 8, a male mandible called "Orpheus" was also discovered at the same time and adjacent to DNH 7.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).