How ‘jaw-jaw’ came to change history
PARIS // An obsession with the lower jaw of a long- dead human being, unearthed in the 1960s at a prehistoric Moroccan campsite, led palaeoanthropologist Jean- Jacques Hublin to the discovery of a lifetime.
After decades of work to identify the jawbone’s owner, Prof Hublin was able to announce on Wednesday that it belonged to the earliest known member of our species.
His efforts revealed that Homo sapiens is 100,000 years older than previously assumed – ageing our species by a third and dislodging East Africa as the cradle of humankind.
It was in 1961 that mining activity at the site, Jebel Irhoud, not far from Marrakesh, first brought an ancient human skull to the surface, followed by more fragments over subsequent years of excavation.
Initially, the pieces were dated to about 40,000 years ago, later pushed to 160,000 years ago.
At the time, the notion that humans originated in Africa did not exist, so the remains were not in the running for Homo sapiens status. Some hypothesised the remains belonged to a type of African Neanderthal – the species then considered to have been the forerunner of modern humans.
Others proposed it was a kind of Neanderthal-human hybrid, yet others an archaic group of far-flung human relatives. “I was never convinced by these ideas,” said Prof Hublin.
As a young researcher, he recalled, a colleague and he colluded in the study of a mandible, or lower jaw, from the fossil trove.
The “mystery of Jebel Irhoud” became the subject of his first scientific publication on human fossils, in 1981, and a career obsession, Prof Hublin said. “The reason why we were so interested in the site ... [is that] we had a mosaic of morphological features that did not make much sense,” he said. The specimens displayed a combination of physical traits, particularly the face, that closely resembled those of modern, living human beings, and other “more primitive” aspects such as a flatter, elongated skull.
Prof Hublin said he visited the site several times in the 1980s and 1990s seeking to resume research, “but that was a difficult project to undertake mostly because the place became a sort of quarry”.
Finally, in 2004, he and a team could start cleaning the site and preparing it for archaeological excavation.
Soon they started adding to the fossil fragment collection – now known to have belonged to five early Homo sapiens.
One man’s pursuit of prehistoric truth led to discovery