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Young World
World’s oldest adornments
COMPILED BY NIMI KURIAN
Perforated shells discovered in a limestone cave in eastern Morocco are the oldest adornments ever found and show humans used symbols in Africa 40,000 years before Europe, the kingdom’s government said. The small oval Nassarius mollusc shells, some dyed with red ochre, were probably pierced to be strung into necklaces or bracelets 82,000 years ago. "This classes the adornments in Pigeon’s Cave at Taforalt as older than those discovered previously in Algeria, So
uth Africa and Palestine," the Culture Ministry said in a statement. The find represents "a big step in the understanding of cultural innovations and the role they played in human history." Morocco has yielded important prehistoric finds including one of the oldest known dinosaur skeletons but little is known of the humans that inhabited the region before Berber farmers settled over 2,000 years ago.
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