Baltimore Sun

Man, is mankind old: Fossils in Morocco show we’re 300K

- By Malcolm Ritter

NEW YORK — How long has our species been around? New fossils from Morocco push the evidence back by about 100,000 years.

The bones, about 300,000 years old, were unearthed thousands of miles from the previous record-holder, found in fossil-rich eastern Africa. The new discovery reveals people from an early stage of our species’ evolution, with a mix of modern and more primitive traits.

“They are not just like us,” said Jean-Jacques Hublin, one of the scientists reporting the find. But they had “basically the face you could meet on the train in New York.”

Coupled with other evidence, the Moroccan fossils suggest that Homo sapiens may have reached its modern-day form in more than one place within Africa, said Hublin, of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany, and the College of France in Paris.

Previously, the oldest known fossils clearly from Homo sapiens were from Ethiopia, at about 195,000 years old.

It’s not clear just when or where Homo sapiens came on the scene in Africa. Hublin said he thinks an earlier stage of developmen­t preceded the one revealed by his team’s discovery.

We evolved from predecesso­rs who had differentl­y shaped skulls and often heavier builds, but were otherwise much more like us than, say, the ape-men that came before them. Our species lived at the same time as some related ones, like Neandertha­ls.

Hublin and others described the new findings in t wo papers released Wednesday by the journal Nature. The discovery could help illuminate how our species evolved, Chris Stringer and Julia GalwayWith­am of the Natural History Museum in London wrote in a Nature commentary.

The Moroccan specimens were found between 2007 and 2011 and include a skull, a jaw and teeth, along with stone tools. Combined with other bones that were found there decades ago but not correctly dated, the fossil collection represents at least five people, including young adults, an adolescent and a child of around 8 years old. Analysis shows their brain shape was more elongated than what people have today.

“In the last 300,000 years, the main story is the change of the brain,” Hublin said.

When these ancient people lived, the site in Morocco was a cave that might have served as a hunting camp, where people butchered and ate gazelles and other prey. They used fire and their tools were made of flint from about 25 miles away.

So where did the fully modern human body develop? The researcher­s say evidence suggests primitive forms of Homo sapiens had already widely spread throughout Africa by around 300,000 years ago. The different population­s may have exchanged beneficial genetic mutations and behaviors, gradually nudging each other toward a more modern form of the species, Hublin said. In this way, he said in an interview, modern Homo sapiens may have arisen in more than one place.

 ?? PATRICK KOVARIK/GETTY-AFP ?? Scientist Jean-Jacques Hublin, right, and Abdelouahe­d Ben-Ncer, of the National Institute of Archaeolog­y in Morocco, pose with the casting of a Homo sapiens skull.
PATRICK KOVARIK/GETTY-AFP Scientist Jean-Jacques Hublin, right, and Abdelouahe­d Ben-Ncer, of the National Institute of Archaeolog­y in Morocco, pose with the casting of a Homo sapiens skull.

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