The Asian Age

Finger bone points to early humans in Arabia

- — AFP

Paris, April 10: A lone finger bone unearthed in the desert suggests modern humans had penetrated deep into Arabia already 85,000 years ago, said a study Monday that claimed to advance our African exodus by millennia.

The research, published in the journal Nature

Ecology & Evolution, challenged a long- held consensus that humans started to move en masse from our birthplace in Africa only about 60,000 years ago, with a few small, unsuccessf­ul migrations before.

Recent archaeolog­ical finds have started to question that idea, with some claiming evidence of homo sapiens spreading beyond Africa and the adjacent Levant region already 120,000 years ago or more.

However, many of those discoverie­s — including from China and Australia — have doubts hovering over their authentici­ty and dating, said the authors of Monday’s study.

Their new fossil finger bone, on the other hand, unquestion­ably belonged to a human and could be dated directly using radiometri­c technology, said the team.

Its age served as rare evidence that “our species was spreading beyond Africa much earlier than previously thought,” said study co- author Huw Groucutt from the University of Oxford.

The bone, just 3.2 centimetre­s ( 1.6 inches) long, is thought to be the middle bone of a middle finger, likely of an adult. It was discovered in the Nefud Desert of Saudi Arabia in 2016, and analysed over two years.

Groucutt and a team used a form of radiometry called uranium series dating to determine the bone’s age by measuring tiny traces of radioactiv­e elements.

The tests revealed it was at least 85,000 years old — possibly 90,000 — making it the “oldest directlyda­ted homo sapiens” fossil ever found outside of Africa and the Levant, said the team.

It is the first fossil of a hominin — the group of humans and our direct ancestors — discovered in what is Saudi Arabia today.

Other archaeolog­ical finds, which their discoverer­s claim are even older, may very well be authentic but were not directly dated, said the research team. Most had their age calculated from the sand or rock layers they were found in, or other items in the vicinity.

Besides redating the human exodus from Africa, the study may also alter its route.

“What we’re arguing here is that there were multiple dispersals out of Africa, so the process of the movement and the colonisati­on of Eurasia was far more complicate­d than our textbooks tell us,” said study co- author Michael Petraglia of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany.

According to one mainstream theory, humans left Africa in a single wave, moving along the coast from Africa via southern Arabia and India all the way to Australia.

The Levant is roughly the eastern Mediterran­ean area today covered by Israel, Lebanon, part of Syria, and western Jordan.

The finger shows “that modern humans were moving across the interior, the terrestria­l heart, of Eurasia — not along the coastlines,” said Petraglia.

The bone was discovered in an area known as Al Wusta that 90,000 years ago would have looked different to the desert it is today — with plentiful rivers and lakes.

The team found fossils of animals, including hippos, as well as advanced stone tools.

 ??  ?? This handout image obtained from the University of Oxford/ Max Planck Institute on April 9, 2018 shows fossil finger bones of homo sapiens from the Al Wusta site, Saudi Arabia. AFP / Ian Cartwright
This handout image obtained from the University of Oxford/ Max Planck Institute on April 9, 2018 shows fossil finger bones of homo sapiens from the Al Wusta site, Saudi Arabia. AFP / Ian Cartwright

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India