New Discovery Changes Everything About The Origins Of Humanity

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Anthropologists, scientists and curious cats amid existential crises have been asking where and when humanity comes from for centuries.

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Scientists have collected scattered clues that suggest the answer lay somewhere in sub-Saharan Africa about 200,000 years ago.

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But two new studies published in the journal, Nature, has uncovered something that could overturn that theory of evolution: Human fossils from over 300,00 years ago.

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Shannon McPherron/MPI EVA Leipzig

Anthropologist Jean-Jacques Hublin and his team from the Max Planck Institute began excavating The Jebel Irhoud site in Morocco – where miners in the 60s had dug up a 40,000-year-old human skull – at the turn of the millennium.

Hublin’s team dug a little deeper and found remains that they say belong to at least five individuals, who lived roughly 300,000-350,000 years ago.

However, the most surprising detail came when Hublin examined the skull closer. The skull -instead of demonstrating the characteristics of our Homo erectus or Homo heidelbergensis ancestors – looked more similar to the human skulls of the modern period.

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Hublin told reporters:

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The face of these people is really a face that falls right in the middle of the modern variation. They had a skull that is more elongated than most of us, but I’m not sure these people would stand out from a crowd today.

The features of the skulls Hublin found in Morocco sit somewhere between our anatomy and our ancestors’ anatomy.

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This unique combination of advanced and archaic features, according to Hublin, could ‘represent the very root of our species.’

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Until now, anthropological logic states the evolution of humankind began somewhere deep in sub-Saharan Africa, in what some researchers have dubbed the ‘Garden of Eden’.

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Instead, Hublin says:

There is no Garden of Eden in Africa, or if there is, it is all of Africa.

This discovery could change the perceived journey of evolution – and stretch it out in terms of both geography and time itself.