noviembre 14, 2024

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Huellas antiguas revelan presencia humana en España 200.000 años antes de lo que se pensaba

Huellas antiguas revelan presencia humana en España 200.000 años antes de lo que se pensaba

Los neandertales fueron una especie humana que vivió en Europa y Asia hace entre 200.000 y 30.000 años. Son conocidos por sus características físicas distintivas, como una construcción compacta, una nariz grande y una mandíbula inferior sobresaliente. Aunque estrechamente relacionados con los humanos modernos, los neandertales eventualmente se extinguieron, probablemente debido a una combinación de factores que incluyen la competencia con los humanos modernos y el cambio climático.

El descubrimiento es importante para examinar el patrón evolutivo de los homínidos durante el Pleistoceno Medio en Europa.

Jorge Rivera, investigador y tecnólogo universidad de sevilla El Departamento de Radioisótopos de GRS ha hecho un importante descubrimiento relacionado con las huellas de un homínido encontrado en Madalascanas en Europa. Utilizando técnicas de luminiscencia inducida ópticamente en el Centro de Investigación, Tecnología e Innovación de la Universidad de Sevilla (CITIUS) y el CENIEH, las huellas son 200.000 años más antiguas de lo que se pensaba, datando de hace 295.800 años en el Paleolítico Medio.

Esto sugiere que los pre-neandertales vivieron en el área de Tonana durante este período. La investigación, dirigida por Eduardo Meyer, catedrático de Paleontología de la Universidad de Huelva, se ha publicado recientemente en la revista

The technique

Optically-stimulated luminescence is a method used to find the absolute age of sediments that have been fully exposed to sunlight.

Scientific milestone

The discovery in June 2020 of hominin footprints more than 106,000 years old next to El Asperillo (Matalascañas, Huelva) was a revolution for the scientific world, so much so that it was considered one of the most important discoveries of that year. But now, the publication of this new paper has confirmed what some experts suspected at the time: those footprints were much older and are in fact 200,000 years older than previously thought. While it was previously placed in the Upper Pleistocene, the evidence now points clearly to the Middle Pleistocene, and to its being 295,800 years old, making it a unique record in Europe, since there is no better site in the world in terms of number, age and area than that of the El Asperillo beach for hominin fossil footprints.

After collecting samples from the various levels, and another two later to compare the first results, the age of the fossil remains was established and points to the Middle Pleistocene, a crucial moment between different climatic stages, between a warm period, MIS 9 (360,000-300,000 years ago), in transition to MIS 8 (300,000-240,000 years ago), in which a major glaciation took place.

The age is thus specified at 295,800 years, with a margin of error of 17,800 years, according to the data collected from the four samples of sedimentary levels in the cliffs of El Asperillo where the site was found, initially 87 footprints, which now has a record of more than 300 footprints, of which 10% are considered well-preserved. With the exception of those from Matalascañas, it is noted that no other hominin footprints are known between the climatic stages MIS9 and MIS 8 of the Middle Pleistocene. That is why it is questioned whether they belong to Neanderthals.

But are they Neanderthals?

At first, they were thought to be Neanderthals, but that is now in doubt. The main hypothesis among the scientists is that they are individuals of the Neanderthal lineage, among which Homo heidelbergensis and Homo neanderthalensis have been associated. The hypothesis that they are pre-neanderthal hominins is feasible.

Precisely for this reason, the Matalascañas footprints are now more valuable due to their contribution to the fossil records of hominins in the Middle Pleistocene, which is very poor in Europe because of the scarcity of deposits with footprints. Until now, according to the paper, footprints this period have only been found at Terra Amata and Roccamonfina (Italy), which were dated to between 380,000 and 345,000 years ago, with records of Homo heidelbergensis.

They are the only ones older than that at Huelva in this era. After these, Biache-Vaast (France) and Theopetra (Greece) sites, from 236,000 to 130,000 years ago, are attributed to Homo neanderthalensis. In this context, the length range of all the footprints found at Matalascañas, from 14 to 29 centimeters, is similar to that found at European sites, such as Theopetra (14-15 centimeters), Roccamonfina (24-27 cm) and Terra Amata (24 cm).

In any case, the experts highlight the singularity of the Matalascañas discovery, whose new dating has questioned the existing paradigms and has required a deep analysis before accepting its conclusions.

The new chronology now establishes a change in the scenario that then prevailed on the coast of the Gulf of Cádiz, with human settlements in a more temperate and humid climate than in the rest of Europe, with high water tables and abundant vegetation.

In that same period, the sea level would have been about 60 meters below its current level. This implies that the coast would be more than 20 kilometers from where it is today, which is how there would have been a great coastal plain, with large flood-prone areas, in which the footprints discovered in mid-2020 would have been made.

The site’s new dating also affects the vertebrate animals found, since the hominin traces there also included footprints of large mammals such as straight-tusked elephants, gigantic bulls (aurochs), and boars. It was the fauna that inhabited Doñana 300,000 years ago and not 100,000 years ago, as other investigations stated.

Reference: “New dating of the Matalascañas footprints provides new evidence of the Middle Pleistocene (MIS 9-8) hominin paleoecology in southern Europe” by Eduardo Mayoral, Jérémy Duveau, Ana Santos, Antonio Rodríguez Ramírez, Juan A. Morales, Ricardo Díaz-Delgado, Jorge Rivera-Silva, Asier Gómez-Olivencia and Ignacio Díaz-Martínez, 19 October 2022, Scientific Reports.
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-22524-2

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