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More evidence that Neanderthals and modern humans overlapped

Date: Sep-25-2014
In 1908, archeologists digging near the Austrian town of Melk, recovered one of the world's

earliest examples of figurative art. This was the Venus of Willendorf, a plump 30,000-year-old

statuette, thought to be a symbol of fertility. Now another team working at the same site has

uncovered stone tools made by modern humans and dated them to 43,500 years ago.

The findings reveal that modern humans inhabited cool steppe-like conditions during that period.

They also add to the evidence modern humans were in Europe at the same time as Neanderthals, and

the overlap between the two is longer than previously thought.

The international team, including Dr. Philip Nigst of the University of Cambridge in the UK,

identified the stone tools as belonging to the Aurignacian culture, which is thought to indicate

presence of modern humans.

They report their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Modern humans and Neanderthals overlapped for much longer than previously thought

With the new findings at the Willendorf site, Dr. Nigst and colleagues push back the date when

early modern humans dispersed into Europe - which is thought to be around 40,000 years

ago. Their study puts them in Europe at a potentially earlier period, when temperatures north of

the Alps were cool.

Radiocarbon dating with stratigraphy show the stone tools - including small

"bladelets" - date from 43,500 years ago.

"The remarkably early date of the finds shows that modern humans and Neanderthals overlapped for

much longer than we thought and that modern humans coped well with a variety of climates," Dr.

Nigst explains.

The discovery follows the recent publication of another study led by the University of Oxford

that revealed Neanderthals and modern

humans co-existed for thousands of years. The team behind that study used improved radiocarbon

dating techniques to analyze samples of bone, shell and charcoal from key archeological sites

around Europe, ranging from Russia to Spain.

The tools that Dr. Nigst and colleagues excavated between 2006 and 2011 include small

"bladelets" that they believe were once part of tools that were thrown. Like the team in the Oxford

study, they used radiocarbon dating with stratigraphy, to show the tools date to 43,500 years

ago.

This date makes the objects significantly older than other Aurignacian artifacts, which have

been found all over Europe. It puts modern humans in a region that is now Austria, at the same time

as Neanderthals were living in other parts of Europe, suggesting they co-existed for longer than

previously thought.

Dr. Nigst says the find at Willendorf strongly suggests Neanderthals and modern humans "met and

interacted, and may well have exchanged both mates and ideas."

"The picture emerging from our study is fascinating because we see significant changes in the

material culture of the last Neanderthals - and these changes occur at the same time that modern

humans were present at Willendorf. The timing of these events cannot be a

coincidence."

Modern humans coped with variety of climates and environments

The team also analyzed the soil the tools were discovered in. This showed the people who used

them were living in a climate that was cool and steppe-like, with river valleys full of conifer

trees.

Previous studies have suggested modern humans spread through Europe during either a very cold

period or during a warmer period, says Dr. Nigst, but these new results suggest "the early modern

human settlers, who are thought to have come to Central Europe from the warmer environments of

southern Europe, did so in a cool steppe-type climate."

The findings indicate that rather than tracking a particular environment, early modern humans

coped well with a range of different environments and were resilient to a variety of climatic

conditions.

Written by Catharine Paddock PhD

View all articles written by Catharine, or follow her on:

Courtesy: Medical News Today
Note: Any medical information available in this news section is not intended as a substitute for informed medical advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional.