“…Importantly, fossils of R. atopocranion co-occur with hominin fossils attributed to H. sapiens (Grine, 2016;Pearson et al, 2020) and Middle Stone Age (MSA) artifacts (Tryon et al, 2010(Tryon et al, , 2012(Tryon et al, , 2014Faith et al, 2015;Blegen et al, 2017;Jenkins et al, 2017), the latter providing the archaeological context of early modern humans in eastern Africa (Tryon and Faith, 2013;Tryon, 2019). Past work in the Lake Victoria Basin has documented the expansion of Serengeti-like grasslands across the region in the late Pleistocene (e.g., Tryon et al, 2010Tryon et al, , 2012Tryon et al, , 2016Faith et al, 2015;Garrett et al, 2015), likely in response to increased aridity and desiccation of the lake (e.g., Beverly et al, 2015aBeverly et al, , 2017Beverly et al, , 2020. This interpretation has been heavily influenced by the fossil faunas, including inferences based on the dominance of R. atopocranion, which was assumed to have had an affinity for open grassland habitats similar to extant alcelaphins (e.g., Faith et al, 2011;Faith, 2014).…”