Irish Independent

Finger bone points to new insight on human migration

- Josh Gabbatiss

A SINGLE finger bone found in the Saudi Arabian desert has provided unpreceden­ted insight into the early migration of our species out of Africa.

At 90,000 years old, the bone is the oldest confirmed Homo sapiens fossil found outside Africa and the Levant. It contradict­s received wisdom concerning the history of humanity, suggesting instead that people were spreading far and wide 30,000 years earlier than previously thought.

The discovery is “a dream come true” for Professor Michael Petraglia, an archaeolog­ist at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, who led the project that found the bone.

Found at a site known as Al Wusta in the middle of the hyper-arid Nefud desert, the bone is the culminatio­n of a decade’s work by Prof Petraglia and his colleagues. During this period they scoured the region for signs of early humans, seeing it as a natural “stepping stone” for humans leaving Africa.

“We found many archaeolog­ical sites; many animal fossils, but one thing was always missing – ancient human fossils,” said Dr Huw Groucutt, an archaeolog­ist at the University of Oxford who directed the field work that led to the discovery.

That all changed with the discovery of the Al Wusta finger bone. Following the fossil’s discovery in 2016, the scientists spent two years subjecting it to rigorous tests determinin­g its age and confirming that it did, indeed, belong to a member of the Homo sapiens species.

The gender and age of the bone’s owner are unknown, but based on their analysis of the site the archaeolog­ists think they belonged to a flourishin­g community in what would have once been lush grassland. Hundreds of animal fossils were found at the site, including those belonging to hippopotam­us, as well as plenty of stone tools made by humans.

These findings were outlined in a study published in the journal ‘Nature Ecology and Evolution’. Though measuring no more than 3cm, the finger bone has big implicatio­ns for our understand­ing of early human history.

“Traditiona­lly the movement of modern humans – our species, Homo sapiens – out of Africa has been conceived of as a single rapid movement 60,000 years ago,” said Prof Petraglia, noting that this view was supported by genetic evidence. “These groups – so the theories have gone – would have been moving on the coastlines out of Africa and subsisting on marine resources, and would have been using very advanced technologi­es.”

In recent years, however, this outlook has been challenged by findings in Israel’s caves that suggest humanity began to take its first tentative steps out of Africa far earlier. Prior to the Al Wusta discovery, however, early dispersals into the Levant were thought to have been unsuccessf­ul, and confined to the forested Mediterran­ean regions. Now, archaeolog­ists have evidence of humans successful­ly striking out into the unknown, early in our species’ history.

“This discovery for the first time conclusive­ly shows that early members of our species colonised an expansive region of south-west Asia and were not just restricted to the Levant,” said Dr Groucutt.

The bone has big implicatio­ns for our understand­ing of human history

 ??  ?? Fossil finger bones of Homo sapiens from the Al Wusta site, Saudi Arabia
Fossil finger bones of Homo sapiens from the Al Wusta site, Saudi Arabia

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