The Sinai Peninsula and the Red Sea have long been portrayed as the primary corridor for human dispersal out of Africa during the Late Pleistocene—the geographical linchpin of the Recent African Origin (RAO) model. This chapter demonstrates, through a multi‑proxy synthesis of paleoclimatology, geochemistry, physiology, population biology, and oceanography, that during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ~26–19 ka), this corridor did not exist. Instead, glacial North Africa constituted a “Death Zone”—a landscape sealed by eight independent, concurrently operating barriers, each individually sufficient to render dispersal impossible. The first barrier is climatic: the collapse of the African monsoon reduced precipitation by 80–95%, and a 10,000‑year drought window (19–9 ka) eliminated surface freshwater from the Sinai–Negev region. The second is geochemical: evaporite salt crusts produced surface waters with Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) of 10,000–50,000 mg/L—a concentration at which single ingestion triggers acute hypernatremia, neurological collapse, and death within 2–4 hours, compounded by thirst‑malfunction mechanisms that silence the physiological alarm system. The third is physiological‑mathematical: the 200 km Sinai crossing requires 7–8 days; summer water demand (6–8 L/day) exceeds maximum portable storage (25–45 L) by a margin that guarantees death on Day 4–5; even under optimal winter conditions, the probabilistic upper bound of survival is <2.1%. The fourth is demographic: the Allee effect demands a minimum viable population of 50–100 breeding individuals—a threshold that the dehydration red line precludes, reducing population‑establishment probability to zero (P₃ = 0). The fifth is biogeographic: faunal assemblages better adapted to aridity (gazelles, wild asses, hyenas) left no evidence of LGM passage—fossil density in Sinai is <1/10 of that in the adjacent Levant, with no gene flow detected between African and Asiatic equid populations. The sixth is hydrogeological: groundwater exists but at 300–800 m depth—inaccessible to Late Pleistocene technology—with no surface tufa deposition for the entire 19–9 ka drought interval. The seventh is oceanographic: LGM Red Sea salinity rose to 50–55 psu, with Bab el Mandeb sill depth reduced to <20 m, blocking both marine life and primitive watercraft; seawater at this salinity is itself a lethal toxin. The eighth is evolutionary: interglacial “Green Sahara” windows (e.g., MIS 5e) opened the gate, but African equatorial populations lacked the glacial environmental filtering experienced by northern competitors—who already occupied the receiving niche. Together, these eight independent barriers form a mathematically redundant seal. The Sinai land bridge was not a migration corridor but a biochemical execution ground; the Red Sea was not a passage but a poison pool. The RAO model's required “out‑of‑Africa” corridor during the LGM is not merely unsupported by evidence—it is physically impossible.
Jing Zhang (Wed,) studied this question.