SAHARA GIANTS
Lens Magazine|September 2022
When in 2000, W paleontologist Paul Sereno went to look for new dinosaur bones in the Sahara Desert, he did not expect to return from there as an archaeologist. 
ALICE DE KRUIJS
 SAHARA GIANTS

But, arriving in the northeast of Niger, Sereno and his colleagues day after day sifting through the sand of Tenere desert, one of the most inhospitable deserts in the world, which even the nomadic inhabitants of the Sahara called "desert in the desert."

There were practically no finds. In the evening on the last day of the excavation, the scientists were about to leave, and most of them went to the camp, but Sereno still insisted that his team get to a distant hill, promising their employees that the expedition was on this hill. Sereno fulfilled his promise, but the end of that expedition was the beginning of great new work: on the way to the hill, scientists found a whole stone age cemetery.

Human bones, H perfectly -preserved in African sand, stick out directly from the ground, paleontologist and their archaeologist noticed from the car, approaching the cemetery. For the first time in 2003, scientists returned to Niger, in the Gobero region, and over the past five years, they found about 200 Stone Age graves. It is the results of the study of these 67 burials and the numerous bones and artefacts found both in these graves and in their environs. As it turned out, the bones of people belonging to two cultures at once lie in Gobero.

The first about ten thousand years ago came here tribes of strong people, hunters, and fishers, which scientists attributed to the Kiffian culture. Just two millennia earlier, the last ice age ended, the Earth entered the Holocene, and the Sahara, which remained a dry desert for many thousands of years, was filled with water and life.

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