An international team of scientists led by archaeologist Eleanor Scerri of the University of Oxford argues that modern humans arose in different locations in Africa at different times, in a process called ‘African multi-regionalism’ . New theories come from new scholars after a gap of few decades just to keep up the wrong theories flourish in new academic wrappings.
‘These groups of human ancestors are thought to have developed in isolation from each other, separated by geographical barriers, until climate change restructured the landscape and brought them together, and then eventually pulled them apart again’. A shameless model that feeds on theorised fossils from South Africa and Ethiopia, dating back to 300,000 years ago. Prof Scerri agrees ‘it’s very hard to answer what an early Homo sapiens looked like’. But forwards erroneous views when he says ‘the trend toward more sophisticated tools and other items is found across Africa, beginning about 300,000 years ago, and has not been traced to one region or one time period’.
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