A recent find of 86,000-year-old human bones from a cave in Southeast Asia suggests that attempts to leave Africa were unsuccessful. According to the study, the new data indicates that before the last successful expansion, modern humans made several attempts to grow.
However, if this was an unsuccessful Out of Africa attempt, how is it possible that modern humans arrived in a very remote cave located high on a mountain in Southeast Asia? This appears to be yet another effort to maintain a theory that is becoming more and more implausible. In fact, compared to Eurasia, Africa has a weaker paleontological foundation for the theory of human evolution.
Afro-Eurasia is the name given by some geographers to the super-continent that includes Eurasia and Africa, just like North and South America are frequently regarded as one continent because they are separated by a narrow man-made canal. Therefore, what has been recently referred to as "African multi-regionalism" is actually "Afro-Eurasian multi-regionalism."