![]() |
The interior of the Manot Cave in Israel's Galilee, where a 55,000-year-old skull sheds new light on modern human migration patterns [Credit: Amos Frumkin/ Hebrew University Cave Research Center] |
Now, researchers describe a partial skull that dates to around 55,000, which was found at Manot Cave in Israel's Western Galilee. The Manot Cave was discovered in 2008 during construction activities that damaged its roof. Rock falls and active stalagmites had apparently blocked the initial entrance to the cave for at least 15,000 years. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Cave Research Center conducted an initial survey of the cave and reported the findings of archaeological remains.
![]() |
Inside the Manot Cave in Israel's Galilee, where a 55,000-year-old skull sheds new light on modern human migration patterns [Credit: Amos Frumkin/ Hebrew University Cave Research Center] |
The skull has a distinctive "bun"-shaped occipital region at the back. In this way its shape resembles modern African and European skulls, but differs from other anatomically modern humans from the Levant. This suggests that the Manot people could be closely related to the first modern humans that later colonized Europe.
![]() |
The Manot calotte (original) is in the top view. Well visible are the skull sutures and the brownish calcite patina [Credit: Copyright: Gerhard Weber] |
Researchers from the Hebrew University played important roles in this discovery. Dating the skull at around 55,000 years is the graduate thesis work of Gal Yasur, a student at the Hebrew University's Earth Sciences Institute in the Faculty of Sciences. The dating work was done at the Geological Survey of Israel under the supervision of GSI Senior Scientists Dr. Miryam Bar-Matthews and Dr. Avner Ayalon, together with Prof. Alan Matthews, the Raymond F. Kravis Professor of Geology at the Hebrew University's Earth Sciences Institute. Prof. Amos Frumkin, Director of the Cave Research Center at the Hebrew University's Geography Department, researched the geological context of the skull in the Manot Cave. Ms. Mae Goder-Goldberger, a doctoral candidate at Hebrew University's Institute of Archaeology, is part of the archaeological team working in the cave.
![]() |
The Manot specimen is on the computer screen, in lateral view (left) and from inside (right) [Credit: Copyright: Gerhard Weber] |
The researchers suggest that the population from which this skull is derived had recently migrated out of Africa and established itself in the Levantine corridor during a time span that was favorable for human migration, due to warmer and wetter climatic events over the Northern Sahara and the Mediterranean.
Source: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem [January 28, 2015]