The remains of a prehistoric town believed to date back 15,000 years and belong to an ancient Berber civilization have been discovered in Western Sahara, Moroccan state media reported Thursday.
A team of Moroccan scientists stumbled across the sand-covered ruins of the town Arghilas deep in the desert of the Morocco-administered territory.
The remains of a place of worship, houses and a necropolis, as well as columns and rock engravings depicting animals, were found at the site near the town of Aousserd in northeastern Western Sahara.
The isolated area is known to be rich in prehistoric rock engravings, but experts said the discovery could be significant if it is proven that the ruins were of Berber origin, as this civilization is believed to date back only 9,000 years.
“It appears that scientists have come up with the 15,000-year estimate judging by the style of the engravings and the theme of the drawings,” Mustapha Ouachi, a Rabat-based Berber historian, told Reuters.
Berbers were the original inhabitants of North Africa before Arabs came to spread Islam in the seventh century.
The population of Western Sahara, seized by Morocco in 1975 when former colonial power Spain pulled out, are mostly of Berber and Arab descent.