“…Some fossiliferous deposits in the Kromdraai area were discovered in 1895 by David Draper, who collected fossiliferous breccias and sent them to the British Museum of Natural History (de Graaff, 1961; Malan, 1959). The Kromdraai site became well known in 1938, when it yielded a partial skull and dentition (TM 1517) designated as the type specimen of a new genus and species, Paranthropus robustus (Broom, 1938a), and subsequently associated with a few postcranial elements to represent the partial skeleton of a single individual (Braga et al, 2017; Broom, 1938b, 1942, 1943; Cazenave et al, 2020). With the exception of the ongoing excavations (since 2014), the work that Broom initiated in 1938 at the “Kromdraai B" (KB) locality (or “hominid site”) was the first in a series of four phases of field research activities (not detailed here; see Braga et al, 2017; Braga & Thackeray, 2016).…”