• East-to-west human dispersal into Europe 1.4 million years ago

    From Primum Sapienti@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 10 23:07:14 2024
    https://www.science.org/content/article/stone-tools-ukraine-were-left-europe-s-first-known-humans
    Stone tools in Ukraine were left by
    Europe’s first known humans
    Primitive tools help trace the paths
    of Homo erectus out of Africa

    Geologic ages ago in what is now Ukraine,
    a pack of human ancestors approached a
    crook in the Carpathian Mountains, which
    held hard but brittle glassy rocks—just
    right to break into tools with sharp
    edges. Bashing one rock against another,
    the humans shaped the stones into simple
    cutters and scrapers, as their own
    ancestors had done before them in Africa.

    More than 1 million years later,
    archaeologists uncovered their cache and
    dated cobbles found with the tools and
    other stone artifacts. In a paper out today
    in Nature, they conclude that early humans
    may have settled in Europe some 1.4 million
    years ago, about 200,000 to 300,000 years
    earlier than previously thought based on
    fossils. If the results withstand scrutiny,
    they will further illuminate the timing and
    pathways of our ancient relatives’ forays
    out of Africa.

    “This is an excellent contribution,” that
    helps solidify the “notion that there have
    been excursions out of Africa repeatedly
    throughout the Pleistocene,” says University
    of Winnipeg biological anthropologist Mirjana
    Roksandic. “I’m fascinated by the amount of
    movement that we can actually find.”
    ...
    Collaborating with Ukrainian archaeologists
    and other international geochronologists,
    Garba selected seven of the quartz-rich
    cobbles of 1 kilogram or less. He found that
    the cobbles—and therefore the tools—had been
    buried sometime between 1.5 million and 1.3
    million years ago. At 48.2° latitude, this
    would be H. erectus’ northernmost known
    sojourn.

    For migrations from Africa into Europe,
    “coming from Eastern Europe [is] the more
    logical route,” Roksandic says. Yet the
    global scientific community has often
    overlooked the importance of Eastern
    Europe as a path into the continent, she
    says.
    ...


    Note - Korolevo is in the western part
    of Ukraine close to intersections of the
    borders with Hungary and Romania.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07151-3
    East-to-west human dispersal into Europe 1.4
    million years ago

    Abstract
    Stone tools stratified in alluvium and
    loess at Korolevo, western Ukraine, have
    been studied by several research groups
    since the discovery of the site in the
    1970s. Although Korolevo’s importance to
    the European Palaeolithic is widely
    acknowledged, age constraints on the
    lowermost lithic artefacts have yet to be
    determined conclusively. Here, using two
    methods of burial dating with cosmogenic
    nuclides, we report ages of 1.42 ± 0.10
    million years and 1.42 ± 0.28 million years
    for the sedimentary unit that contains
    Mode-1-type lithic artefacts. Korolevo
    represents, to our knowledge, the earliest
    securely dated hominin presence in Europe,
    and bridges the spatial and temporal gap
    between the Caucasus (around 1.85–1.78
     million years ago) and southwestern Europe
    (around 1.2–1.1 million years ago). Our
    findings advance the hypothesis that Europe
    was colonized from the east, and our
    analysis of habitat suitability suggests
    that early hominins exploited warm
    interglacial periods to disperse into
    higher latitudes and relatively continental
    sites—such as Korolevo—well before the
    Middle Pleistocene Transition.

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  • From Primum Sapienti@21:1/5 to JTEM on Mon Mar 11 22:18:10 2024
    JTEM wrote:
    On 3/11/24 1:07 AM, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    More than 1 million years later,
    archaeologists uncovered their cache and
    dated cobbles found with the tools and
    other stone artifacts. In a paper out today
    in Nature, they conclude that early humans
    may have settled in Europe some 1.4 million
    years ago, about 200,000 to 300,000 years
    earlier than previously thought based on
    fossils.

    And more than 600,000 thousand years before
    that they were already in China, leaving
    behind tools.

    So human ancestors were already leaving
    behind tools in Asia back when Sediba was
    falling into caves, and a juvenile
    Paranthropus was dying in South Africa just
    so an undergraduate could later decide that
    it shared "Affinities with" erectus...

    No, things aren't quite as clear cut as you
    misrepresent.

    They're talking about EUROPE, not CHINA. Figure one
    in the paper shows dispersal routes north through
    Turkey and the Caucasus then west into EUROPE or
    into Turkey then west into what's now Bulgaria
    and Greece (which are part of EUROPE).

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