Off the wire
Cargo train services launched between Xi'an and Warsaw  • Top news items in major Zambia media outlets  • Top news items in major Kenyan media outlets  • Urgent: Second Indonesian escapes Abu Sayyaf group in Philippines  • Top news items in major S. African media outlets  • Singapore stocks close 0.22 pct lower  • Roundup: South Sudan's Machar leaves Juba for neighbouring country  • Luis Enrique happy as Barca claim Supercup  • Large catfish in Western Australia have penchant for mice: research  • Israeli army arrests 5 Palestinians, seizes weapons in overnight raid  
You are here:   Home

Saudi Arabia discovers "oldest human bone"

Xinhua, August 18, 2016 Adjust font size:

Saudi Arabia announced its discovery of the "world's oldest human bone" in Tabuk in northwestern Saudi Arabia, Al Arabiya local news reported on Thursday.

The bone is the middle part of the middle finger of a human being believed to have lived 90,000 years ago, rendering it the oldest human trace found to date in the Arabian Peninsula, Al Arabiya said.

The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage, which announced the find, said the bone was discovered during excavations at Tayma, where a large oasis exists with a long history of habitation.

The discovery was made by a joint research team of Saudi archaeologists and experts from Oxford University.

The team is part of the Green Arabia Project, a Saudi-British survey and excavation undertaking aiming to perform several environmental and archaeological studies of various historical sites in Saudi Arabia. Endit