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An early Aurignacian arrival in southwestern Europe

Authors :
María D. Simón-Vallejo
Francisco J. Jiménez-Espejo
Miguel Cortés-Sánchez
Arturo Morales-Muñiz
Carlos P. Odriozola
María Carmen Lozano Francisco
José L. Vera Peláez
Chris Stringer
Adolfo Maestro González
Naohiko Ohkouchi
José Antonio Riquelme-Cantal
Antonio García-Alix
Rubén Parrilla Giráldez
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

Westernmost Europe constitutes a key location in determining the timing of the replacement of Neanderthals by anatomically modern humans (AMHs). In this study, the replacement of late Mousterian industries by Aurignacian ones at the site of Bajondillo Cave (Malaga, southern Spain) is reported. On the basis of Bayesian analyses, a total of 26 radiocarbon dates, including 17 new ones, show that replacement at Bajondillo took place in the millennia centring on ~45–43 calibrated thousand years before the present (cal ka bp)—well before the onset of Heinrich event 4 (~40.2–38.3 cal ka bp). These dates indicate that the arrival of AMHs at the southernmost tip of Iberia was essentially synchronous with that recorded in other regions of Europe, and significantly increases the areal expansion reached by early AMHs at that time. In agreement with human dispersal scenarios on other continents, such rapid expansion points to coastal corridors as favoured routes for early AMH. The new radiocarbon dates align Iberian chronologies with AMH dispersal patterns in Eurasia. New 43–45 ka dates for stone tool assemblages associated with anatomically modern humans (AMHs) at the southern Spanish site of Bajondillo suggest an early AMH incursion and weaken the case for late Neanderthal persistence in the region.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c50c958f3cadcd6d2df886e0a632dd6b