The Prague Post - Ivory Coast's epochal prehistoric finds pass unseen

EUR -
AED 4.298638
AFN 73.741103
ALL 95.412163
AMD 435.164258
ANG 2.095049
AOA 1074.513295
ARS 1636.62903
AUD 1.63937
AWG 2.108352
AZN 2.014654
BAM 1.955673
BBD 2.356996
BDT 143.588206
BGN 1.952503
BHD 0.442232
BIF 3480.914097
BMD 1.170494
BND 1.494877
BOB 8.086336
BRL 5.88466
BSD 1.170199
BTN 110.230475
BWP 15.850698
BYN 3.315028
BYR 22941.679697
BZD 2.353597
CAD 1.601745
CDF 2707.352932
CHF 0.920178
CLF 0.026656
CLP 1049.055039
CNY 7.990375
CNH 7.999781
COP 4172.45947
CRC 532.553984
CUC 1.170494
CUP 31.018087
CVE 110.257828
CZK 24.375125
DJF 208.391994
DKK 7.472872
DOP 69.714274
DZD 155.138433
EGP 61.598994
ERN 17.557408
ETB 180.908741
FJD 2.580529
FKP 0.86737
GBP 0.866967
GEL 3.142751
GGP 0.86737
GHS 12.991933
GIP 0.86737
GMD 86.034519
GNF 10272.156302
GTQ 8.946265
GYD 244.828845
HKD 9.17038
HNL 31.096313
HRK 7.532093
HTG 153.207416
HUF 365.04424
IDR 20179.606806
ILS 3.495154
IMP 0.86737
INR 110.256718
IQD 1532.967542
IRR 1542769.435177
ISK 143.806416
JEP 0.86737
JMD 184.681931
JOD 0.829868
JPY 186.756942
KES 151.403273
KGS 102.304907
KHR 4688.614903
KMF 493.948151
KPW 1053.474841
KRW 1731.94499
KWD 0.360277
KYD 0.97522
KZT 543.59303
LAK 25642.784305
LBP 104793.992801
LKR 373.017769
LRD 214.732363
LSL 19.459302
LTL 3.456164
LVL 0.70802
LYD 7.425676
MAD 10.827342
MDL 20.350329
MGA 4862.579843
MKD 61.625726
MMK 2457.87697
MNT 4190.879267
MOP 9.443724
MRU 46.706164
MUR 54.814251
MVR 18.095365
MWK 2029.23333
MXN 20.383507
MYR 4.640988
MZN 74.81594
NAD 19.459302
NGN 1586.265152
NIO 43.066279
NOK 10.935157
NPR 176.368761
NZD 1.994047
OMR 0.450042
PAB 1.170199
PEN 4.057349
PGK 5.079691
PHP 71.064155
PKR 326.229212
PLN 4.241695
PYG 7420.39053
QAR 4.266023
RON 5.090245
RSD 117.406458
RUB 88.075562
RWF 1710.459512
SAR 4.390195
SBD 9.420817
SCR 16.781729
SDG 702.881082
SEK 10.82025
SGD 1.494715
SHP 0.873892
SLE 28.873343
SLL 24544.666554
SOS 668.745073
SRD 43.850798
STD 24226.859728
STN 24.497883
SVC 10.239159
SYP 129.412597
SZL 19.451402
THB 37.873688
TJS 11.00015
TMT 4.102581
TND 3.417205
TOP 2.818269
TRY 52.701483
TTD 7.947347
TWD 36.834854
TZS 3046.211504
UAH 51.568147
UGX 4353.62382
USD 1.170494
UYU 46.356193
UZS 14059.845202
VES 565.036862
VND 30853.047711
VUV 137.9191
WST 3.174694
XAF 655.903128
XAG 0.015448
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.163318
XCG 2.109018
XDR 0.815367
XOF 655.928343
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.309113
ZAR 19.391379
ZMK 10535.85442
ZMW 22.146181
ZWL 376.898546
  • BCC

    0.5800

    84.4

    +0.69%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    12.9

    +0.16%

  • RIO

    1.1000

    99.95

    +1.1%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    23.31

    +0.34%

  • RBGPF

    63.0000

    63

    +100%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.87

    -0.96%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.93

    +0.09%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    15.35

    -1.24%

  • RELX

    0.2050

    36.335

    +0.56%

  • NGG

    0.3850

    87.345

    +0.44%

  • GSK

    -0.9910

    54.639

    -1.81%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    15.67

    +0.32%

  • BP

    -0.3050

    46.045

    -0.66%

  • AZN

    -2.9350

    189.365

    -1.55%

  • BTI

    1.0000

    58.28

    +1.72%

Ivory Coast's epochal prehistoric finds pass unseen
Ivory Coast's epochal prehistoric finds pass unseen / Photo: Issouf SANOGO - AFP

Ivory Coast's epochal prehistoric finds pass unseen

In the streets of Anyama, children play and braziers smoke on corners. There is little to show that the ground of this everyday Ivory Coast neighbourhood conceals seminal prehistoric treasures.

Text size:

Near the local storefronts lies the site of an excavation that unearthed stone tools from 150,000 years ago -- the earliest sign ever of humans inhabiting a tropical forest.

"That's interesting," said Ruth Fabiola Agoua, 25, who keeps a shop with her mother yards from the spot, north of the Ivorian economic capital, Abidjan.

"You cannot live without knowing your history."

- Ages of man -

Homo sapiens emerged in Africa 300,000 years ago but were once thought to have colonised tropical forests only 70,000 years back at the most.

After dating the findings from Anyama, researchers from Ivory Coast and several other countries concluded in a study that humans were living in such an environment at that spot 150 millennia ago.

By analysing biological traces and sediments, the study revealed the place was "a wet forest environment" at the time when the tools were deposited there.

"The results represent the oldest yet known clear association between humans and this habitat type," they wrote in their paper, published in the journal Nature last month after years of research.

"The secure attribution of stone tool assemblages with the wet forest environment demonstrates that Africa's forests were not a major ecological barrier" for homo sapiens at that stage.

- Tool boxes -

Among the study's authors was retired Ivorian archaeologist Francois Guede Yiode, 77 -- considered by colleagues to be the only qualified prehistory specialist in the country.

He started excavating on the privately owned land in 1982 after being alerted to the remains by a geologist.

Eventually, he and the study's co-authors got several metres below the surface, finding tools from the pleistocene epoch, which stretched from some 2.5 million to 12,000 years ago.

"The picks were used to cut up materials," he said. Other tools, dubbed "choppers", had a sharp edge for cutting through animal skin.

Today, despite the findings they inspired, the tools themselves lie hidden in boxes stacked in a small room in Guede Yiode's modest house -- a sign of what he bitterly calls the state's "lack of will" to help.

Despite a growth in research over the past 15 years, here "archaeology is a science that is slow in publishing findings because it is not funded", he said.

The artefacts and biological remains found in Anyama were analysed in German laboratories and part of the research was funded by European universities and institutes.

The Ivorian archaeologist said he provided 15 million Central African francs (currently $25,000) from his own pocket to fund the first few years of excavations at Anyama.

- Past and present -

Now Guede Yiode and his colleagues hope the finds will boost archaeology in Ivory Coast.

"There are several sites in Ivory Coast where you could perform archaeological excavations and studies on the palaeolithic period," said another of the study's authors, Eugenie Affoua Kouame, a researcher at Ivory Coast's Institute of African History, Art and Archaeology.

Guede Yiode said he has been trying in vain to have the cache of tools displayed in a museum for public and researchers to see.

"I don't feel comfortable having it all in my house."

A local anthropology undergraduate, Akissi Diane Guebie, said she hoped the Nature study would "encourage students to specialise in these subjects".

Walking to work in Anyama, local security guard Basile Sawadogo, 51, seemed unmoved by the closeness of prehistory, however.

"We live in the present," he said.

X.Vanek--TPP