A stretch of hillside south of Haifa has yielded an unexpected window into a distant chapter of human history. Archaeologists working near the town of Fureidis are uncovering a prehistoric cave that remained closed off from the outside world for hundreds of thousands of years, preserving traces of a community that lived long before either Neanderthals or modern humans came to dominate the landscape.The site, dated to somewhere between 400,000 and 250,000 years ago, offers an unusually intact record of life during a period that remains poorly understood.

Prehistoric cave near Fureidis, dating to 400,000–250,000 years ago, yielded flint tools, animal bones, fire use and signs of prolonged human activity, offering rare insights into…

A stretch of hillside south of Haifa has yielded an unexpected window into a distant chapter of human history. Archaeologists working near the town of Fureidis are uncovering a…