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- Category: Technology
- Published: 2026-05-17 21:44:47
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Archaeologists have uncovered 260 circular mass graves in the Sahara Desert, dating back thousands of years before the rise of ancient Egypt. The discovery, announced today, rewrites the timeline of early human settlement in North Africa.
“We kept finding large, circular mass graves—unlike anything seen before in this region,” said Dr. Amina El-Sayed, lead archaeologist from the University of Cairo. “These burials predate the earliest Egyptian dynasties by at least 1,000 years.”
The graves were found in the Tenere Desert of Niger, part of the vast Sahara. Radiocarbon dating places the burials between 6,200 and 5,400 BCE, during the African Humid Period when the Sahara was lush savanna.
Background
Between 10,000 and 5,000 years ago, the Sahara experienced a wet “Green Sahara” phase. Lakes, rivers, and grasslands supported abundant wildlife and human populations.

Previous excavations at the Gobero site in Niger uncovered single graves. However, the new findings at the Kiffian and Tenerian burial grounds reveal organized mass burials, suggesting complex social structures.
“The circular layout and precise spacing imply ceremonial practices,” said Dr. Mark Turner, co-author of the study from the University of Oxford. “These communities had distinct burial traditions long before pharaohs built pyramids.”
What This Means
The discovery challenges the narrative that complex burial rituals originated solely in the Nile Valley. Instead, it shows that early Saharan societies developed sophisticated funerary practices independently.

“This forces us to reconsider the cultural exchange between the Green Sahara populations and early Egyptian civilization,” added Dr. El-Sayed. “Trade routes may have existed across North Africa much earlier than we thought.”
The graves also provide new data on ancient migration patterns. Analysis of skeletal remains suggests a diverse population, with links to both North African and sub-Saharan groups.
Immediate Impact
Archaeologists now plan a larger survey to map the full extent of the burial grounds. “We only scratched the surface—there could be hundreds more graves,” said Dr. Turner.
Local governments in Niger and neighboring countries are increasing protection for the site. “We must preserve this heritage before it’s lost to shifting sands,” urged a spokesperson for the Nigerien Ministry of Culture.
What Comes Next
The research team will publish detailed findings in the Journal of African Archaeology next month. DNA analysis is underway to determine genetic connections to ancient Egyptians and modern populations.
For now, the Tenere mass graves stand as a stark reminder of a lost civilization that flourished in the Sahara before the desert reclaimed it.
This is a breaking story. More details to follow.