primeval
adjective·/praɪˈmiː.vəl/
Of the earliest age; belonging to beginnings so old they feel more like origin than history. Primeval carries firstness, something untouched by later arrangement.
They walked into primeval forest where the air smelled of time before roads.
Etymology
From Latin primaevus "of the first age," from primus "first" + aevum "age." A timeline compressed to a threshold: not oldness in general, but the world's early chapter.
Related Words
primordialearliest in origin; often more scientific
primevalismthe aesthetic of “first-world” wildness
archaicold-fashioned; more cultural than temporal
pristineuntouched; a frequent implication