The article “Traces of early humans found in southern Iran” was published in the Tehran Times on September 24, 2019.

The version below has been edited from its original in the Tehran Times. For more information on these topics see:

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A team of archaeologists has found traces of early humans and their basic handmade tools near the village of Bangelayan, southern Hormozgan province. CHTN quoted Hormozgan province’s tourism chief, Reza Borumand, as having stated:

“Traces of early human presence, which dates over 40,000 years, were discovered in Bandar Abbas [county]. Stone artifacts discovered from this area include parent rock, related components, modest chips, as well as serrated and abrasives tools, which were notably scattered across the area …”

As stated by the Tehran Times in the article “Iran among countries with Neanderthal discoveries” (September 24 2019): “A team of archaeologists has found traces of early humans and their basic handmade tools near the village of Bangelayan, southern Hormozgan province” (Image source: Tehran Times).

Regarding technological and typological features of the stone tools, this area can be attributed to the Middle Paleolithic, which spans [somewhat] from 300,000 to 40,000 years ago, which is coincident with the presence of Neanderthals and possibly Homo sapiens in Iran (the Iranian plateau), the official explained.

Earlier this year, the Journal of Human Evolution, suggested that Neanderthals were roaming at the Iranian Zagros Mountain sometimes between 40 to 70 thousand years ago. The new study on a human tooth discovered in 1999 in a cave called Wezmeh near Kermanshah, western Iran, showed that this tooth that previously thought to be modern human in fact belongs to a Neanderthal child.

As stated by the Tehran Times in the article “Iran among countries with Neanderthal discoveries” (August 17, 2019): “A new find, recently published in the Journal of Human Evolution, suggests that Neanderthals were roaming at the Iranian Zagros Mountain sometimes between 40 to 70 thousand years ago” (Image source: Tehran Times).

According to Fereidoun Biglari, head of the Paleolithic Department of the Museum and co-author of the article, this premolar tooth belongs to a Neanderthal child who was between six and ten years old at the time of death.