Aïn Hanech
The prehistoric site of Aïn El-Hanech is a former lake situated in the commune of Guelta Zerka, approximately 7 kilometers northwest of El Eulma, in the Sétif Province of Algeria.
History
The Aïn El-Hanech site was discovered in 1947 by French paleoanthropologist Camille Arambourg during his research on continental deposits in the Sétif region. Fossils found at the site have been dated to approximately 2.4 million years ago.Description
The site has produced fossilized remains of Lower Pleistocene animals, associated with an Oldowan-type pebble industry. The paleofauna includes elephants, equids, bovids, suids, hippopotamuses, and rhinoceroses. The worked pebbles consist of polyhedrons, subspheroids, and faceted spheroids similar to those from the Olduvai sites in Tanzania. They were found in a layer dated by paleomagnetism to approximately 1.8 million years ago and represent tools shaped through rudimentary flaking.Paleoenvironment
The remains of flora and fauna indicate an environment of alluvial plains and open savanna, with C3-type vegetation similar to that of present-day Mediterranean regions.The site suggests seasonal occupation along the shores of an ancient lake, which provided raw materials such as limestone pebbles and flint nodules for toolmaking, as well as opportunities for hunting animals attracted to the water.