BBC NEWS: "Clues found for early Europeans"
An interesting BBC NEWS item.
Polat Kaya
From url : http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6253121.stm
Clues found for early Europeans
The researchers looked bone and ivory artefacts found at Kostenki |
An archaeological find in Russia has shed light on the migration of
modern humans into Europe.
Artefacts
uncovered at the Kostenki site, south of Moscow, suggest modern humans were at
this spot about 45,000 years ago.
The
first moderns may have entered Europe through a different route than was
previously thought, the international team reports.
The
research is published in the journal Science.
"Until
now, it appeared as though the earliest presence of modern humans in Europe was
in south central Europe, in places like Bulgaria and Greece," explained
John Hoffecker, author on the paper and a research scientist at the University
of Colorado at Boulder, US.
"This
reflects an entry from the Levant (eastern shores of the Mediterranean) just
before 44,000 years ago."
Missing Neanderthals
But
the team believes it has now found an alternative and possibly earlier entry
route into the continent.
The
researchers examined tools, personal ornaments and carved ivory discovered
under a layer of ancient volcanic ash at the site, which lies along the Don
River.
The
artefacts most likely belonged to modern humans and dated to about as early as
45,000 years ago, said Professor Hoffecker. However they were dissimilar to
artefacts found at the other European sites, he added.
|
"This
suggests we have a not very closely related group of people at Kostenki,
suggesting at the very least that we have an alternate route for modern humans
into Europe - perhaps this being the earliest one," he told the BBC News
website.
Professor
Hoffecker said he was surprised to have found such early evidence of modern
humans at Kostenki.
"It
is arguably the coolest and driest part of mid-latitude Europe. It is the last
place we would expect to see them first," he added.
A
possible reason to migrate to these harsher conditions may have been the lack
of Neanderthals present in this area at this time.
"The
absence of Neanderthals meant there were no competitors to deal with for
resources," Professor Hoffecker said.
Possible routes
Fossil
records suggest modern humans emerged in sub-Saharan Africa about 200,000 years
ago, but their dispersal is thought to have begun between 60,000 and 50,000
years ago.
The
earliest evidence of modern humans appears in Australia, dating to about 50,000
years ago.
Professor
Hoffecker said it was difficult to say exactly where the modern humans found in
Kostenki would have come from.
One
possible route, some researchers believe, is from western Asia via the Caucasus
Mountains, which lie between the Caspian and Black Seas.
A skull found in
South Africa has been linked to modern humans |
He
added that modern humans might have migrated into central Asia, but then turned
back on themselves to make the move into Europe.
Another
paper, published in the same journal, reveals that a skull found in South
Africa appears to represent an ancestor of the modern humans that eventually
migrated to Europe and Asia.
Professor
Chris Stringer of the department of palaeontology at the Natural History
Museum, London, said: "These papers are interesting from an
anthropological and archaeological point of view, and confirm some of the
things we have thought on this subject.
"I
think we will see increasing evidence of these ancestral modern people and
their behaviour in western Asia, and at an even earlier date, in Africa."