1.8m-year-old tooth of early human found on dig in Georgia
by Reuters in Orozmani from on (#63EF9)
Student's find provides new evidence region may be one of first places early humans settled outside Africa
Archaeologists in Georgia have found a 1.8m-year-old tooth belonging to an early species of human that they say cements the region as the home of one of the earliest prehistoric human settlements in Europe, and possibly anywhere outside Africa.
The tooth was discovered near the village of Orozmani, which lies about 60 miles south-west of the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, and is near Dmanisi, where human skulls dated to 1.8m years old were found in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
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