Anthropology
Related: About this forumRainforest Discovery Reveals Early Humans in Rainforest 150,000 Years Ago, Rewriting Human Evolution History
By Gio Farley
Published: May 21 2026, 07:53 AM EDT

Scientists believed early humans mainly thrived in open grasslands and coastal regions where food and movement were easier. Dense tropical forests were often viewed as too difficult for ancient populations to survive in for long periods. A major rainforest discovery in West Africa is now changing that understanding and forcing researchers to rethink parts of human history.
Archaeologists working at an ancient site in Côte d'Ivoire uncovered evidence suggesting early humans in rainforest environments were living there around 150,000 years ago. The finding pushes back the known timeline for rainforest habitation by tens of thousands of years and is being described as one of the most important breakthroughs in recent paleoanthropology. The discovery also reveals how adaptable ancient humans may have been long before agriculture, cities, or advanced technology existed.
Ancient Rainforest Humans May Have Lived in Tropical Forests Much Earlier Than Expected
The site at the center of the study, known as Bété I, was first excavated decades ago. Researchers initially found stone tools but lacked the scientific technology needed to determine their true age. A modern international research team recently returned to the site and applied advanced dating methods that changed everything.
Scientists determined the artifacts were approximately 150,000 years old. According to researchers, this makes the site the oldest known evidence of humans living in a dense tropical rainforest in Africa. Previous evidence of long-term rainforest occupation in Africa dated to much later periods.
Earlier discoveries in Southeast Asia showed humans surviving in tropical forests roughly 70,000 years ago, but the new evidence from West Africa pushes the timeline back dramatically.
More:
https://www.natureworldnews.com/articles/72985/20260521/rainforest-discovery-reveals-early-humans-rainforest-150000-years-ago-rewriting-human-evolution.htm
erronis
(24,563 posts)Hope the anti-science plutocrats don't kill us all off.
Easterncedar
(6,486 posts)I like that. Thanks, Judi Lynn. You broaden my horizons, and make DU much more fun.
Warpy
(114,688 posts)we know humans have moved into it, often with astonishing speed.
What would be more shocking is if humans had stayed in one place.
After all, the oldest modern human remains were found in west Africa, not the east where we most likely evolved.