There has been much interest in how the hippocampus codes time in support of episodic memory. Notably, while rodent hippocampal neurons, including populations in subfield CA1, have been shown to represent the passage of time in the order of seconds between events, there is limited support for a similar mechanism in humans. Specifically, there is no clear evidence that human hippocampal activity during long-term memory processing is sensitive to temporal duration information that spans seconds. To address this gap, we asked participants to first learn short event sequences that varied in image content and interval durations. During fMRI, participants then completed a recognition memory task, as well as a recall phase in which they were required to mentally replay each sequence in as much detail as possible. We found that individual sequences could be classified using activity patterns in the anterior hippocampus during recognition memory. Critically, successful classification was dependent on the conjunction of event content and temporal structure information (with unsuccessful classification of image content or interval duration alone), and further analyses suggested that the most informative voxels resided in the anterior CA1. Additionally, a classifier trained on anterior CA1 recognition data could successfully identify individual sequences from the mental replay data, suggesting that similar activity patterns supported participants' recognition and recall memory. Our findings complement recent rodent hippocampal research, and provide evidence that long-term sequence memory representations in the human hippocampus can reflect duration information in the order of seconds. hippocampus | CA1 | episodic memory | time | functional magnetic resonance imaging S pace and time are significant dimensions of our episodic memories (1). However, while much is known about the neural substrates that contribute to spatial cognition and memory (2-4), relatively little is known about how the brain, in particular the medial temporal lobe (MTL), processes temporal information in the service of episodic memory. The discovery of rodent hippocampal time cells (5-7), which fire at specific moments during the empty delay between two events, suggests a potential hippocampal mechanism for representing the temporal structure of memories (8). Crucially, however, it is unclear whether a similar hippocampal mechanism supports human memory.Because time cells in the hippocampus (HPC) of the rodent signal the passage of time in the order of seconds, one would expect that a similar neural mechanism in humans would lead to the human HPC representing temporal duration information in the order of seconds in the context of episodic memory. To our knowledge, however, there is no existing evidence for this. No work has examined human HPC involvement in memory for temporal durations in the order of seconds within the context of long-term memory. While recent human investigations have focused on HPC contributions to the representation of temporal order,...