In the Eastern Desert in Sudan, Polish archaeologists have found 500,000 years old traces of the presence of Homo erectus. According to the discoverers, it is a proof of existence of an unknown migration route of this species beyond the continent.
![]() |
Credit: Maciej Jordeczka |
Eastern Africa is considered the cradle of humanity. The oldest traces of human activity in the form of stone tools have been discovered along the Great Rift Valley, which stretches from Mozambique through Tanzania to the coast of the Red Sea in the region of Eritrea and Ethiopia. In terms of research on the oldest traces of man, the area farther to the north of Africa - the Eastern Desert in Sudan - is somewhat forgotten. Polish archaeologists decided to focus on this area. The project funded by the National Science Centre involves scientists from Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Germany and the US.
![]() |
Credit: Marcin Szmit |
![]() |
Credit: Miroslaw Masojc |
![]() |
Credit: Miroslaw Masojc |
Up to now, the prevailing views were that H. erectus moved north mainly along the Nile Valley. The researcher adds that although today the study area is a flat and inhospitable desert, hundreds of thousands of years ago there were periods of a much more humid climate. There was vegetation and rivers - their dried beds indicate the course towards the north-east, towards the Red Sea.
![]() |
Credit: Maciej Jordeczka |
![]() |
Credit: Maciej Jordeczka |
The discovery of over half a million years old stone tools was made accidentally in recent years. "There was a gold rush in the eastern part of Sudan, in the Eastern Desert, as in many places in the Sahara - people looking for this precious metal in makeshift, open-cast mines. By uncovering successive layers, miners came across tools from several hundred thousand years ago", says Prof. Masojc.
Alerted by reports of unusual finds, archaeologists set out into the field. "We work in the mines after miners have already left them, so there is no conflict of interest", the scientist adds.
![]() |
Credit: Miroslaw Masojc/PAP |
The first results of the project have just been published in the Journal of Human Evolution.
Additional information about the project can be found at: http://sudan.archeo.uni.wroc.pl/
Author: Szymon Zdzieblowski | Source: PAP - Science in Poland [May 08, 2019]
No comments: