Skull May Solve Mystery of First Humans in Europe

A 55,000-year-old skull could offer clues on first Europeans.

The finding sheds new light on when early humans left Africa and migrated through the Middle East before colonizing Europe.

While the skull fragment does not include facial features, scientists wrote that it is "unequivocally modern." The discovery supports the belief that modern humans (Homo sapiens) and Neanderthals may have lived side by side in the Levant around the time interbreeding is believed to have occurred.

Neanderthal remains have previously been excavated from areas near the cave also dating back to around the same time period.