Hominid Cave at Thomas Quarry I (Casablanca,
Morocco): recent findings and their context.
Jean-Paul Raynal, Fatima-Zohra Sbihi Alaoui, Abderrahim Mohib, Mohssine
El Graoui, David Lefevre, Pierre-Jean Texier, Denis Geraads, Jean-Jacques
Hublin, Tanya Smith, Paul Tafforeau, et al.
To cite this version:
Jean-Paul Raynal, Fatima-Zohra Sbihi Alaoui, Abderrahim Mohib, Mohssine El Graoui, David
Lefevre, et al.. Hominid Cave at Thomas Quarry I (Casablanca, Morocco): recent findings and
their context.. The oldest human expansions in Eurasia Favouring and limiting factors, international
Congress„ Nov 2008, Paris, France. halshs-00442647
HAL Id: halshs-00442647
https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00442647
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Author manuscript, published in "The oldest human expansions in Eurasia Favouring and limiting factors, international Congress,,
Paris : France (2026)"
halshs-00442647, version 1 - 21 Dec 2009
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle
Les premières expansions humaines en Eurasie à partir de l’Afrique
Facteurs limitant ou favorisant
The oldest human expansions in Eurasia
Favouring and limiting factors
Colloque international organisé au Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris
Département de Préhistoire
Auditorium de la Grande Galerie et de l’Evolution
26, 27, 28 novembre 2008
International Congress organised in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Paris
Auditorium de la Grande Galerie
november 26, 27, 28 - 2008
Abstract
Hominid Cave at Thomas Quarry I (Casablanca, Morocco): recent findings and their context
Jean-Paul Raynal, Fatima-Zohra Sbihi-Alaoui, Abderrahim Mohib, Mosshine El Graoui, David Lefèvre
Jean-Pierre Texier, Denis Geraads, Jean-Jacques Hublin, Tanya Smith, Paul Tafforeau, Mehdi Zouak
Rainer Grün, Edward J. Rhodes, Stephen Eggins, Camille Daujeard, Paul Fernandes
Rosalia Gallotti, Saïda Hossini, Alain Queffelec
Hominid Cave at Thomas Quarry I (Casablanca, Morocco): recent findings and their context
halshs-00442647, version 1 - 21 Dec 2009
Jean-Paul Raynal1, Fatima-Zohra Sbihi-Alaoui2, Abderrahim Mohib2, Mosshine El Graoui2
David Lefèvre3, Jean-Pierre Texier1, Denis Geraads4, Jean-Jacques Hublin5, Tanya Smith6
Paul Tafforeau7, Mehdi Zouak2, Rainer Grün8, Edward J. Rhodes9, Stephen Eggins8
Camille Daujeard10, Paul Fernandes1, Rosalia Gallotti11, Saïda Hossini12, Alain Queffelec1.
1 - Université Bordeaux 1 Sciences et technologies, UMR 5199 PACEA, IPGQ, Bât. B18, av. des Facultés, F-33405 Talence
2 - Direction du Patrimoine, Institut National des Sciences de l’Archéologie et du Patrimoine, Rabat, Maroc
3 - Université Paul Valery Montpellier III, UMR 5140 « Archéologie des sociétés méditerranéennes », route de Mende, F-34199, Montpellier
4 - CNRS UPR 2147, 44 rue de l'Amiral Mouchez, F-75014 Paris
5 - Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig
6 - Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, 11 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
7 - Laboratoire de Géobiologie, Biochronologie et Paléontologie Humaine, UMR 6046, CNRS, Université de Poitiers, 40 Avenue du Recteur
Pineau, F-86022 Poitiers Cedex ; European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 6 rue Jules Horowitz, BP 220, F38046 Grenoble Cedex
8 - Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia
9 -Department of Environmental & Geographical Sciences, Manchester Metropolitan University, Chester Street, Manchester, M1 5GD, UK
10 - 6 grande rue de Vaise, F-69009 LYON
11 - Largo T. B. Barra, 4, 71022 Ascoli Satriano (FG), Italie
12 - Université Moulay Ismaïl, Faculté des Sciences, Département de Géologie, BP 11201, Zitoune, Meknès, Maroc
The Thomas Quarry I, first investigated by P. Biberson (1961a and b), was made famous in 1969 with
the discovery by Ph. Beriro of a half-mandible, first attributed to Atlanthropus mauritanicus by
Ennouchi (1969), but more recently considered as a representative of Homo rhodesiensis (Hublin,
2001). In 1985, further investigations revealed the presence of a Lower Acheulian assemblage in
marly limestones at the bottom of the section (Raynal et Texier, 1989), but it was only from 1988
onwards that modern controlled excavations have been undertaken, within the framework of the
Franco-Moroccan co-operative project Casablanca.
The stratigraphy of the quarry is complex. It represents several major episodes of coastal
sedimentation that are dated to the Lower and Middle Pleistocene on the basis of a detailed regional
lithostratigraphical and microfaciological study (El Graoui, 1994; Lefèvre, 2000; Lefèvre et Raynal,
2002; Texier et al., 1994, 2002). Moreover, a continental sediments preserved in a cave belonging to a
polyphase paleo-shoreline date to the Middle and Upper Pleistocene on lithostratigraphical and
biochronological evidence (Geraads, 1980, 2002; Hossini, 2002). In the Hominid Cave (GH), the
general stratigraphy shows at the top a red complex with abundant microfauna (stratigraphic unit 1).
Below this, a multilayer dripstone floor (stratigraphic unit 2) caps the lower stratigraphic units (4 and
5). Stratigraphic unit 4 contains artefacts, fauna and hominid fossils and rests on collapsed eolianite
blocks imbedded in coarse sands which form stratigraphic unit 5; this lowermost intertidal unit fossilize
the notch of the polyphase shoreline (Raynal et al., 1995, 2001, 2002).
The lithic assemblage recovered by recent excavations in GH stratigraphic unit 4 is similar to the
series collected at the time of the discovery of the first Homo fossil in 1969 (Geraads et al., 1980). It is
manufactured mainly on various quartzites available close to the site as blocks and pebbles and a few
flint nodules collected from beach deposits. It consists of pebble-tools (mainly unifacial choppers with
a few removals) and core-tools, semi-cortical flakes obtained by direct and bipolar flaking, along with
rare small handaxes/handaxe-like cores, hammerstones and anvils. As do the upper occupations of
the nearby Rhinoceros Cave (GDR) in Oulad Hamida 1 quarry, the GH series represents a facies of
the Acheulian.
Besides a few reptiles (Testudo sp.) and birds, the associated mammalian macrofauna is rich.
Primates: Theropithecus oswaldi, Homo sp. Carnivores: Herpestes ichneumon, Hyaena hyaena, Felis
cf. libyca, Panthera cf. leo, cf. Nyctereutes sp., Vulpes sp., Lycaon cf. magnus, Mellivora capensis,
halshs-00442647, version 1 - 21 Dec 2009
Lutra sp., Ursus bibersoni, Monachus sp. Artiodactyla: Kolpochoerus sp., Phacochoerus africanus,
Bovini, Gazella cf. atlantica, Hippotragini, Alcelaphini cf. Parmularius sp., Connochaetes taurinus
prognu Perissodactyla: Equus cf. mauritanicus Ceratotherium mauritanicum Rodents: Hystrix cristata,
Paraethomys tighennifae, Praomys darelbeidae, Mus sp., Gerbillus cf. campestris, Gerbillus grandis,
Meriones cf. maghrebianus, Meriones cf. maximus, Ellobius cf. atlanticus, Eliomys sp. Lagomorpha:
Lagomorpha indet. Insectivores: Crocidura sp. Chiroptera: Chiroptera indet.
This faunal assemblage clearly belongs to the same faunal set as the one from GDR whose age lies
between 435 ± 85 and 737 ± 129 ka (Rhodes et al., 2006), but some elements show that the
assemblage from Thomas GH is earlier. Among large mammals, the suid Kolpochoerus is represented
by scrappy remains but whose identification is almost certain. It is a widespread genus in East African
sites, in the Late Pliocene of Ahl al Oughlam, and is also present in Thomas Quarry I level L; based on
the dates of Hominid Cave (see below), this site records its last appearance in North Africa. Some
rodents are also distinct from those of GDR. Meriones is represented by the same two species, but
they are smaller, suggesting an earlier age. Eliomys is smaller than E. darelbeidae from GDR. Lastly,
a lower molar of Ellobius has a notched anterior lobe of m1, reminiscent of Tighenif, whereas those
from GDR are rounded.
In the macrofauna collected in the central part of the cave during excavations prior to 2005, carnivores
were abundant (43% of NISP) while antelopes (25% of NISP) and gazelles (20% of NISP) were
dominant among herbivores. Carnivores were considered as the first agent for bone accumulation
(Bernoussi, 1997). In the faunal spectrum from recent excavations in the south-eastern part of the
cave (2005-2008), cf. Nyctereutes sp. is dominant among carnivores (34 % of NISP), and gazelles
and other antelopes among herbivores (respectively 31.9 % and 17.1 % of NISP). Preliminary
taphonomical analysis of the megafauna shows that the carcasses were processed by carnivores and
that cut-marks are absent, which raises the question of the human role in the bone accumulations.
Moreover, geological studies have demonstrated that this unit has been partly re-deposited by run-off
which mixed human artefacts with the bones accumulated by predators.
Four teeth of Homo have been recovered in stratigraphic unit 4 between 1994 and 2005: a right upper
premolar (Th1 94 OA 23-24), another right upper premolar (Th1 95 SA 26 n° 89), a first left upper
incisivor (Th1 95 SA 26 n° 90) and a left upper premolar (Th1 2005 PA 24 n° 107). The teeth are large
relative to living humans, and show moderate to heavy wear. It was not possible to quantify crown
formation or enamel thickness due to the degree of attrition. Phase contrast synchrotron
microtomographic imaging revealed enamel microstructure in one premolar.
The first right upper premolar discovered in 1994 has been dated using laser ablation ICP-MS. Dating
procedures followed those applied to the Banyoles mandible (Grün et al. 2006). Combining the ESR
+94
and U-series data for the modelling of the U-uptake (Grün et al. 1988), an US/ESR age of 501 -76
ka is obtained (with associated p-values of 1.43 ± 0.59 and 0.75 ± 0.45 for enamel and dentine,
respectively). Sediment samples were used for OSL dating. The OSL measurement followed the
procedures applied in previous studies of the Pleistocene successions of Casablanca (Rhodes et al.
2006). The sample above the tooth yielded an age of 420 ± 34 ka and the one below 391 ± 32 ka.
These results are in agreement with an earlier OSL study, which bracketed the age between 360 and
470 ka. Nevertheless, lithostratigraphy and biochronology suggest that this is a minimum age.
Hominid Cave at Thomas Quarry I is vast, and large parts of its deposit are still under study. The
preliminary dates, as well as biostratigraphy and lithostratigraphy point towards a greater antiquity for
the human fossils than was previously estimated. Thomas Quarry I Hominid Cave is one of the very
rare African key-sites for studying individuals and techno-economic behaviors related to a crucial
period of human evolution during which Norh African and European populations started to diverge
biologically.
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