Skip to content
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025
Theme by ThemeinProgress
Proudly powered by WordPress
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
AllThatHistory
  • You are here :
  • Home
  • Archaeology & Discoveries
  • New Evidence Shows We Lived in Ancient Rainforests 150,000 Years Ago
An ancestors may have been much happier living in rainforests than we thought. Source: Goodfon / Public Domain.
Archaeology & Discoveries

New Evidence Shows We Lived in Ancient Rainforests 150,000 Years Ago

Allthathistory March 7, 2025

For much of human history rainforests have been the poster child for untouched, virgin wilderness. We only had to look at the vast trees and hidden world beneath the canopy to instantly tell that what we were looking at was wild, untouched by man.

In more recent years we have come to realize that this is not true in the slightest. As our understanding of rainforest biomes grew we found that, far from being pristine, they were in fact largely influenced by nomadic tribes who crisscrossed their interiors for millennia.

However rainforests, typically difficult to traverse and packed with things that bite, sting or scratch, are still largely considered barriers to the spread of early man, so long as you go far enough back into the past. There was a point, at some time, when these were too much for humans to handle, right?

  • The Wendigo: Native American Stuff of Nightmares
  • Ritual Timber Circle Found in Denmark may have Links to Stonehenge

Well, a new study published in Nature has pushed that timeline back as far as 150,000 years, way earlier than anyone had thought. The study, of the rainforests of what is now Côte d’Ivoire, has found evidence of groups of humans cohabiting in clearings amidst the dense undergrowth at this time.

Read moreThe Cave of Hebron: Tomb of the Patriarchs?

This is extremely early, dating to the Middle Pleistocene before even the Stone Age. Humans only appeared in Africa some 300,000 years ago, and this relatively quick inhabitation of the rainforest suggests they were not really a barrier at all.

Our previous dating for the earliest rainforest inhabitation was only 18,000 years ago in Africa, although examples which may be as old as 73,000 years are known in Asia. There was some inconclusive evidence which suggested an ancient rainforest inhabitation in Kenya, some 77,000 years old, which had been hitherto dismissed: this will clearly need to be revisited in the light of the new evidence. 

But this new discovery is more than just a simple reshuffling of what early man was doing back in the day. The fact that our ancient ancestors found it apparently easy and convenient to inhabit forested areas reshapes our understanding of how we hunted our prey, how we fed our communities, and how our hunter gatherer society evolved on a fundamental level.

Man is evolved for long distance running, preferring to persistently chase its prey until exhaustion. But if, all these millennia ago, we were trying our luck in forests, perhaps this interpretation of who we really are, how we came to be what we are today, is wrong.

Read more3,000 Year Old Sword of a Pharoah Discovered in Egypt

Header Image: An ancestors may have been much happier living in rainforests than we thought. Source: Goodfon / Public Domain.

You may also like

Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions

Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection

Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years

Were Wolves Kept and Nursed by Ancient Seal Hunters?

Ancient Peruvians Survived Climate Catastrophe Through Adaptation, Not War

Peru’s Mysterious “Band of Holes” May Have Been Ancient Marketplace and Accounting System

Allthathistory
Written by Allthathistory

Tags: Côte d’Ivoire, evolution, Homo Sapiens, hunter gatherer, man, Stone Age

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions
    Archaeologists have identified a panel containing approximately 30 ancient rock carvings in Santiago de Méndez canton, Morona Santiago province, marking
  • Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection
    Archaeologists at Pompeii have identified the original location of a looted fresco fragment depicting the infant Hercules strangling serpents, solving
  • Maya Medical Systems Used Living Organisms as Precision Surgical Tools
    Maya medical systems deployed living organisms as precision surgical tools centuries before germ theory existed. Recent archaeological evidence shows these
  • Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years
    Hunter-gatherers in what is now southwestern Texas and northern Mexico created rock art for more than 4,000 years, maintaining consistent
  • The Thermal Engineering Behind Tiwanaku’s Agricultural Success
    At nearly 3,850 meters above sea level, frost arrives almost nightly on Bolivia’s Altiplano. Modern visitors struggle to breathe. Yet
The Gnostic Gospels
Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People
Substack Articles

Latest from AllThatHistory Weekly

A Fragment of the Iliad Found Inside a Mummy Rethinks How Greeks Were Used in Egyptian Burial Magic

A Fragment of the Iliad Found Inside a Mummy Rethinks How Greeks Were Used in Egyptian Burial Magic

A papyrus piece of Homer's Iliad discovered inside a Saqqara mummy reveals how ancient Greeks were used in Egyptian funerary magic.

Read More →
Troy Was Real. Here Is What the Archaeology Actually Shows.

Troy Was Real. Here Is What the Archaeology Actually Shows.

The debate over whether the Trojan War happened has run for centuries.

Read More →
550-Million-Year-Old Soft-Bodied Sponge Fossil Fills Critical Gap in Animal Evolutionary Record

550-Million-Year-Old Soft-Bodied Sponge Fossil Fills Critical Gap in Animal Evolutionary Record

A Precambrian sponge lacking hard skeletal structures suggests the 'missing years' of early animal evolution reflect a preservation gap, not an absence of life.

Read More →
What Sank to the Bottom of a Swiss Lake 2,000 Years Ago

What Sank to the Bottom of a Swiss Lake 2,000 Years Ago

In November 2024, the Cantonal Office of Archaeology of Neuchatel was conducting routine aerial monitoring of the lakebed when a photograph revealed something that did not belong there.

Read More →
13,000 Years Ago, Someone Painted a Bison in the Dark. We Just Found Out When.

13,000 Years Ago, Someone Painted a Bison in the Dark. We Just Found Out When.

The Font-de-Gaume cave sits in a limestone hillside near the town of Les Eyzies in the Dordogne region of southwestern France.

Read More →
The War Horn That Made Roman Soldiers Flinch

The War Horn That Made Roman Soldiers Flinch

In the summer of 2025, during a routine archaeological excavation ahead of a housing development in West Norfolk, England, a construction site turned up something unexpected.

Read More →
❮
❯

Subscribe to receive our newest archaeology articles, long-form investigations, and historical insights directly in your inbox.

© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025