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ALGERIA THE CRADLE OF HUMANITY

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2.4-Million-Year-Old Stone Tools Turn Up in an Unexpected Place


Artifacts found in Algeria complicate the story of early-human evolution.

ED YONGNOV 29, 2018
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An Oldowan core from Ain BoucheritMOHAMED SAHNOUNI

To the untrained eye, the rock would have looked like any other. But when Mohamed Sahnouni pulled it out of the ground in the summer of 2006, he immediately recognized it as a chopper: a palm-size tool deliberately flaked to create a sharp cutting edge. It looked exactly like something from the so-called Oldowan culture, a style of stone tools that existed between 1.9 and 2.6 million years ago, predate Homo sapiens, and had mainly come from East Africa.

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But Sahnouni wasn’t in East Africa.

For years, he and his colleagues had been exploring the archaeological site of Ain Boucherit in Algeria’s High Plateaus, just an hour’s drive from the Mediterranean at the continent’s northern edge. This part of the continent has been relatively neglected by archaeologists, and until now, the oldest artifacts from the region were 1.8 million-year-old stone tools that Sahnouni had found at nearby Ain Hanech. But what his team discovered at Ain Boucherit was much older.

After unearthing that first chopper, his team eventually dug up 252 other Oldowan-style tools. They also found 19 animal bones with long indentations that they interpret as cut marks, a sign of prehistoric butchery. The oldest of these tools and bones are 2.4 million years old. “It was a big joy to find them,” Sahnouni says.



  • The tools are so old that they couldn’t possibly have been made by Homo sapiens, and with no hominin bones from the site, it’s unclear which species created the objects. Still, “it’s extremely provocative evidence,” says Eleanor Scerri, an archaeologist from the University of Oxford who was not involved in the study. The artifacts suggest that hominins were in North Africa, carving up animal meat, at least 600,000 years earlier than previously thought. More importantly, they suggest that the Oldowan culture—the earliest well-accepted stone technology—either spread from East Africa to the north very quickly or originated in different parts of Africa independently.

“It highlights North Africa, and the Sahara in particular, as a major region of importance in the evolutionary processes leading to our own species,” Scerri says. “Sahnouni and his colleagues have been working in that area for many years, and I really salute their persistence.”

A map of Africa showing places where Oldowan tools have been found (M. Sahnouni)
Sahnouni has been working in the Algerian High Plateaus since the 1980s, and he uncovered the tools and bones of Ain Boucherit around a decade ago. But finding artifacts is often the easiest bit of archaeology. “The real issue was how to date them in a way that would convince the scientific community,” Sahnouni says.


The geology of the Algerian plateaus is such that many widely used and highly accurate dating techniques can’t be utilized there. Instead, the team relied on the fact that Earth’s magnetic field has repeatedly flipped throughout the planet’s history. Those inversions leave telltale signals within rocks. By comparing the magnetic signals from Ain Boucherit against a well-established global calendar, the team could work out how old any part of their site was—including the layers that yielded the bones and tools.

The animal bones also provided clues. Many of them came from species of extinct pigs, horses, and elephants that only lived within certain time frames, which the team checked against the dates from their magnetic calendar. This work, which took most of the decade to do, revealed that the two areas the team dug up were 1.92 million years old and 2.44 million years old.

There are two ways of interpreting these dates, Sahnouni says. First, it’s possible that the same hominins who made the East African Oldowan tools 2.6 million years ago rapidly spread to the northwest, covering more than 3,000 miles in about 150,000 years. To Sahnouni, that seems unlikely. “It’s not like they just decided to get to the north and started walking,” he says. The intervening land “wasn’t easy to go through, and they would have had to look for food and resources. That takes time.”


The explanation he favors is that early stone tools, and perhaps even the hominins who made them, evolved independently in different parts of Africa—in the east, northwest, and perhaps elsewhere. There’s other evidence for this. For example, the oldest known hominin is 7 million years old, and was found in Chad, about 1,900 miles west of the rich finds in East Africa. “That was a turning point in rethinking the origin of humans in only East Africa,” says Sahnouni, who is confident that work in other parts of Africa will upend the narrative even further.

Read: The new story of humanity’s origins in Africa

But there’s an elephant in the room. In 2010, researchers working at Dikika, Ethiopia, found 3.4-million-year-old bones that, they said, had cut marks made by stone tools. It was a stunning claim, which pushed the evidence for such tools back by 800,000 years. And if it’s right, it changes the narrative again, and re-centers East Africa as a site of technological industry that was up and running well before the north got involved. But many archaeologists dispute the Dikika finds, saying that the so-called cut marks could have been made by trampling hooves or biting crocodiles, instead of by hominin butchers. The controversy is so fiery that Sahnouni’s team doesn’t mention or cite the Dikika evidence at all in their new paper—an academic burn, if ever there was one.


By contrast, he says the cut-marked bones he found at Ain Boucherit really were cut. One of his colleagues carefully examined them under a microscope, and found signs that are supposedly distinct from marks created by trampling or biting. “The cuts are mostly on limb bones, which are the meatiest parts,” Sahnouni adds.

But Jessica Thompson, an anthropologist from Emory University, isn’t convinced that the “cut marks” from Dikika and Ain Boucherit are all that different. “The paper’s images are not especially convincing to me, and it makes me wonder what the other, less-good examples look like,” she says. “By ignoring the [Dikika] debate, they’re not really acknowledging the fact that there could be a problem with their site, too.”

She doesn’t fault the team. They’ve analyzed the bones in the same way that their peers have long done. But Thompson says that many archaeologists are now reassessing those approaches in light of Dikika. “We’ve realized that the way we used to do things will always create this controversy if we keep persisting,” she says, “so we’re using new approaches, like 3-D–scanning and machine learning.”

“I dearly hope [the Ain Boucherit finds] are cut-marked bones,” she adds. “You could put the total number of cut-marked bones [from other sites] inside a very small shoebox. Their collection would far outstrip that.”

We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to [email protected].



ED YONG is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where he covers science.
 
  1. Algeria, new cradle of humanity?
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Professor Sahnouni during the excavations (M.Sahnouni)
It was believed that south-east Africa had hosted the first hominids. But a new archaeological discovery could put everything in question.


By Jean-Paul Fritz

Posted on November 30, 2018 at 3:52 pm
For a long time, South-East Africa has been known as the cradle of humanity, whether modern or ancient. For Homo Sapiens, this thesis was defeated by the discovery announced last year in Jebel Ihroud, Morocco, fossils repelling 100,000 years the origins of modern humanity. Today, it is in Algeria that hominids come to find a new anchor point on the site of Ain Boucherit, near Setif.

A team led by Professor Mohamed Sahnouni, of the National Center for Studies on Human Evolution (CENIEH) of Burgos (Spain), have indeed found traces of the passage of these distant ancestors to two successive periods, here are 1 , 9 and 2.4 million years. They detail their discovery in a study published this Friday in the journal Science .

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One of the cut stones found on the Algerian site (M.Sahnouni)


The oldest traces of butchery
In several excavations, archaeologists have discovered many cut stones, according to a technique that experts call Oldowayen , the oldest known stone cutting technology. The oldest Oldowayen tool finds were made in the Rift Valley, Ethiopia, and date back 2.6 million years. The oldest fossils of the genus Homo , they go back to 2.8 million years, still in Ethiopia.

With these cut stones, the researchers also found bones of animals that lived then in these regions, when the Sahara was not as desert as today: behemoths, elephants, horses, rhinoceros, antelopes, pigs, hyenas , and even crocodiles.

Some of these animals, mainly cattle and horses, carry traces associated with tools: cuts and fractures, showing that these ancient humans have carefully removed the flesh of animals to eat, and broken bones to remove the marrow .

These bones would be "the oldest substantial evidence of butchery," according to paleoanthropologist Thomas Plummer , of Queen College New York, (who did not participate in the study). "Even though other sites of the same age in East Africa have stone tools, animal butchery evidence is not as strong," he says.

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Map showing ancient settlements of hominids and Oldowayens tool sites in Africa. (M.Sahnouni)


Our ancestors traveled earlier than we thought
Besides the butchery, the discovery of these stone tools is important because of its temporal proximity to those previously found in Ethiopia. Only 200,000 years separate the "butchers" of the region of Setif from their colleagues in the south, which is much closer than what specialists could have imagined so far.

The commonly accepted theory was that toolmakers from East Africa had only left the "cradle of humanity" 1.8 million years ago to start spread to the rest of the continent ... and the rest of the world. Discovering such tools that have been around for 2.4 million years puts this hypothesis in question.

Scientists have not found hominid bones at the Ain Boucherit site. We do not know for sure which species was able to carve these tools. The Oldowayen, generally associated with Homo Habilis , could also concern other branches of our family tree. For the authors of the discovery, "the most important question today is who made these tools." However, 3.3 million-year-old Australopithecus have been discovered in the southern Sahara, Chad, 3,000 km from the Rift.

"Clearly, Lucy's contemporary hominids wandered across the Sahara, and their descendants could be responsible for the archaeological signatures we have just discovered in Algeria," says Dr. Sileshi Semaw, co-author of the study.
The findings on the Algerian site, technologically similar to the Oldowayen, "show that our ancestors ventured into every corner of Africa, not just East Africa," says Professor Sahnouni. "These proofs from Algeria have changed the old visions that held East Africa to the cradle of humanity, in fact, it is the whole of Africa that is the cradle of humanity."

For Rick Potts , paleoanthropologist at the Smithsonian Institution (Washington), who also did not participate in the study, "there was probably a corridor across the Sahara, with population movements between east and north of Africa." Another hypothesis, according to him, is that hominids living in two different parts of Africa could have invented separately stone tool cutting techniques ...

Jean-Paul Fritz

ScienceAncient PeoplesShareSubscribe
New Archaeological Site Rivals East Africa for "Cradle of Humanity" Title
Stone tools may have evolved independently in two ancient sites.













By Sarah Sloat on November 30, 2018
Filed Under Bones, Evolution & Rock
Long before the spork and iPhone, the best tools at humanity’s disposal were stone tools used to chop, scrape, and pound. To date, the oldest known tools were rough stone cores found in Gona, Ethiopia, a site in East Africa that came to be known as the “cradle of humanity” as a result. Now, a new discovery from across the African continent is posing an unprecedented challenge to that title.

In the Science study, an international team of archeologists announce the discovery of stone tools in Algeria that could reshape human history. In a sedimentary basin in Algeria’s high plateau region, alongside the bones of crocodile, elephant, and hippopotamus ancestors, they found stone butchery tools nearly as ancient as those found in the cradle of life.

The tools from Ethiopia, categorized as Oldowan technology, are thought to be around 2.6 million years old. The two groups of tools discovered in Ain Boucherit, Algeria, meanwhile, are dated at 1.9 million years old and an astounding 2.4 million years old.

East Africa has long been considered the site of the earliest human stone manufacturing, but the new tools indicate that people were living in North Africa 600,000 years earlier than previously thought. In light of their discovery, the study authors argue that even older Oldowan artifacts may be found elsewhere in North Africa, rivaling East Africa’s relics in age.

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Stone tool artifacts found in Ain Boucherit, Algeria.







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“Despite its distance from East Africa, the evidence from Ain Boucherit implies either rapid expansion of stone tool manufacture from East Africa to other parts of the continent, or possible multiple origin scenarios of ancestral hominins and stone technology in both East and North Africa.”

The team, led by CENIEH researcher Mohamed Sahnouni, Ph.D., has been examining the Ain Boucherit site for the past eight years. Alongside ancient animal bones, they found the limestone and flint tools, which they dated using three separate techniques.
 
Eh? Algerians with identity issues trying to claim African civilization. Pretoria should make official complaint to a country that did not even exist 60 years ago. African civilization is African. Not Algerian. They don't even have a African religion but follow a alien Middle Eastern faith and a language foisted on them by conquerers from Arabia!

@hellfire
 
Eh? Algerians with identity issues trying to claim African civilization. Pretoria should make official complaint to a country that did not even exist 60 years ago. African civilization is African. Not Algerian. They don't even have a African religion but follow a alien Middle Eastern faith and a language foisted on them by conquerers from Arabia!

@hellfire


?????????????????????/
 
Eh? Algerians with identity issues trying to claim African civilization. Pretoria should make official complaint to a country that did not even exist 60 years ago. African civilization is African. Not Algerian. They don't even have a African religion but follow a alien Middle Eastern faith and a language foisted on them by conquerers from Arabia!

@hellfire
Waw! French too had the same point you are making and tried to hide the discovery and push the Moroccan remains instead..But what can I say, Allah has always had Algeria in his heart..For Algeria’s existence , it superced that of Pakistan for over Thousand years...and in that area there is no debate!
 
Waw! French too had the same point you are making and tried to hide the discovery and push the Moroccan remains instead..But what can I say, Allah has always had Algeria in his heart..For Algeria’s existence , it superced that of Pakistan for over Thousand years...and in that area there is no debate!
Well, we have Mohenjo Daro, Harappa, Mehr Garh of Indus Valley civilization going back 8,000 years.
 
State hahahahah.....
A lot better than Pakistan..No body shit on us like they pooped on you since the existence of Pakistan...And Pakistan is a Nuclear nation, Algeria is not! Algeria is a state built on solid foundations and her citizenry makes all the difference!
 
Did Algeria as a state exist 1,000s of years ago? And here is our Indus [Number 3].

5bJjTlB.png
Algeria was a state in a lot better shape than France who invaded her with the complicity of Turks.

State hahahahahah.........
Realy? Did you want me to diss Pakistan? There are pleinty of articles..all you have to do is Google...:pakistan::pakistan::cheers:
 
Algeria was a state in a lot better shape than France who invaded her with the complicity of Turks.


Realy? Did you want me to diss Pakistan? There are pleinty of articles..all you have to do is Google...:pakistan::pakistan::cheers:
State hahahaha:omghaha:
 
Are we seeing a Algerian-Pakistan meme war lol nah Nothing against Algerians out of all the Arabs besides the Lebanese and Syrians,Algerians get a thumbs up from me they at least did not cuck to the French as their cough cough J...w *** kisser Morrocans brothers and unlike their Gulf Arab cousins they dont use their oil money to find cough cough Wahhabism
 
Are we seeing a Algerian-Pakistan meme war lol nah Nothing against Algerians out of all the Arabs besides the Lebanese and Syrians,Algerians get a thumbs up from me they at least did not cuck to the French as their cough cough J...w *** kisser Morrocans brothers and unlike their Gulf Arab cousins they dont use their oil money to find cough cough Wahhabism
There will be no war between Pakistan and Algeria, I was just replying to Johnwick..
There is Morocco and Moroccans..I found that you judged harshly, Moroccan have really no say in what goes in their country..The policies of the Kingdom are managed from Paris for the king and his brew..The opinion of the population at large doesn’t count for beans...
 
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