HomeWorldMoroccan cave fossils point to a missing chapter in human evolution

Moroccan cave fossils point to a missing chapter in human evolution

Fossils discovered in a quarry cave in Morocco and dated to roughly 773,000 years ago are offering scientists a rare glimpse into one of the least understood periods of human evolution, when the ancestors of modern humans were beginning to diverge from other ancient human lineages, the New York Times reported.

January 08, 2026 / 12:27 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Moroccan cave fossils point to a missing chapter in human evolution
Moroccan cave fossils point to a missing chapter in human evolution
Snapshot AI
  • Casablanca fossils date to 773,000 years ago, filling a key gap in Africa's history.
  • Jawbones show a mix of archaic and modern traits, resembling Homo antecessor.
  • Study finds early connections between African and European hominins in Middle Pleistocene.

The remains, described this week in a study published in Nature, were unearthed at a site known as Grotte à Hominidés in Casablanca. Together, they form one of the most important African hominin finds from a period between 600,000 and one million years ago — a stretch of time for which the continent’s fossil record is unusually thin.

A rare window into a missing period

Story continues below Advertisement

The fossil collection includes a nearly complete adult jawbone, half of another adult jaw, a child’s jaw, several vertebrae and isolated teeth. These remains come from a time when scientists believe the African lineage that eventually produced Homo sapiens began to separate from Eurasian hominins that later gave rise to Neanderthals and Denisovans.

That makes the discovery particularly significant. Very few African fossils have been securely dated to this crucial interval, leaving a major gap in the story of how modern humans emerged.