Abstract

Archaeological records in Southwest Asia and the Arabian Peninsula provide hints that Sudan contributed to both the northern and the southern route of the Out-of-Africa hominin dispersals. The northern route that led East African hominins out of their continent into Southwest Asia and onwards almost inevitably traversed Sudan. But Sudanese technological traditions also spread across the Red Sea, following the southern route. Furthermore, the large number of sites dating to the Early and Middle Stone Age shows that Sudan was not just a corridor, but a place of long-term thriving growth for hominins.

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