Oman Daily Observer

Moroccan fossils shake up knowledge of human origins

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The understand­ing of human origins was turned on its head with the announceme­nt of the discovery of fossils unearthed on a Moroccan hillside that are about 100,000 years older than any other known remains of our species, Homo sapiens.

Scientists determined that skulls, limb bones and teeth representi­ng at least five individual­s were about 300,000 years old, a blockbuste­r discovery in the field of anthropolo­gy.

The antiquity of the fossils was startling — a “big wow,” as one of the researcher­s called it.

But their discovery in North Africa, not East or even sub-Saharan Africa, also defied expectatio­ns.

And the skulls, with faces and teeth matching people today but with archaic and elongated brain cases, showed our brain needed more time to evolve its current form.

“This material represents the very root of our species,” said palaeoanth­ropologist Jean-Jacques Hublin of Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy, who helped lead the research published in the journal Nature.

Before the discovery at the site called Jebel Irhoud, located between Marrakech and Morocco’s Atlantic coast, the oldest Homo sapiens fossils were known from an Ethiopian site called Omo Kibish, dated to 195,000 years ago.

“The message we would like to convey is that our species is much older than we thought and that it did not emerge in an Adamic way in a small ‘Garden of Eden’ somewhere in East Africa.

It is a pan-African process and more complex scenario than what has been envisioned so far,” Hublin said.

The Moroccan fossils, found in what was a cave setting, represente­d three adults, one adolescent and one child roughly age 8, thought to have lived a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.

These were found alongside bones of animals including gazelles and zebras that they hunted, stone tools perhaps used as spearheads and knives, and evidence of extensive fire use.

An analysis of stone flints heated up in the ancient fires let the scientists calculate the age of the adjacent human fossils, Max Planck Institute archaeolog­ist Shannon McPherron said.

There is broad agreement among scientists that Homo sapiens originated in Africa.

These findings suggest a complex evolutiona­ry history probably involving the entire continent, with Homo sapiens by 300,000 years ago dispersed all over Africa.

Morocco was an unexpected place for such old fossils considerin­g the location of other early human remains.

Based on the shape and age of the Moroccan fossils, the researcher­s concluded that a mysterious, previously discovered 260,000-yearold partial cranium from Florisbad, South Africa also represente­d Homo sapiens.

The Jebel Irhoud people had large brain cases that lacked the globular shape of those today.

Max Planck Institute palaeoanth­ropologist Philipp Gunz said the findings indicate the shape of the face was establishe­d early in the history of Homo sapiens, but brain shape, and perhaps brain function, evolved later.

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