New Dating Places the First European Hominids in Southern Iberia

by Pelican Press
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New Dating Places the First European Hominids in Southern Iberia

One of the most significant controversies in the study of human evolution and migration is determining when and by what route the first hominids arrived in Europe from Africa. Recent geological dating techniques applied to the Orce sites in the Baza basin, Granada, Spain, have discovered human remains that are approximately 1.3 million years old. This finding supports the hypothesis that humans may have entered Europe through the southern Iberian Peninsula via the Strait of Gibraltar, rather than returning to the Mediterranean through Asia. 

New Dating Techniques Reveal Ancient Hominids 

According to a report by the University of Barcelona, the study, led by Luís Gibert of the University of Barcelona’s Faculty of Earth Sciences, in collaboration with researchers from the Berkeley Geochronology Centre and Murray State University in the United States, utilized paleomagnetism to date the Orce region. Paleomagnetism studies the inversion of the Earth’s magnetic poles, recorded in minerals, to establish time periods. The new dating involved an area of Orce that had never been sampled before and was protected from erosion. 

“The uniqueness of these sites is that they are stratified and within a very long sedimentary sequence, more than eighty meters (262 feet) long,” explained Gibert. 

This extensive sequence allowed the identification of a magnetic polarity sequence with five magnetic events, placing the Orce sites between the Olduvai and Jaramillo subchron, approximately between 1.77 and 1.07 million years ago. Through a statistical age model, the researchers refined the chronology to a margin of error of only 70,000 years. 

The oldest site, Venta Micena, dates back to 1.32 million years ago, followed by Barranco León at 1.28 million years, and Fuente Nueva 3 at 1.23 million years. 

Photo of the last excavations carried out at the site of Venta Micena 3, in Orca in 1992, when the first human remains were found there 

Photo of the last excavations carried out at the site of Venta Micena 3, in Orca in 1992, when the first human remains were found there. (Luís Gibert/University of Barcelona) 

Faunal Analysis Supports Ancient Dating 

To support their findings, the researchers also analyzed the fauna at the Orce sites, comparing it with other Early Pleistocene sites in Europe. Robert Martin, an expert in paleontology, conducted a detailed analysis of micromammals and large mammals from Orce. The results indicated that the fauna from Orce was more primitive than that from the Sima del Elefante site, where more evolved species were found. 

The absence of certain animals, such as the ancestors of pigs considered to be Asian immigrants, further supported the antiquity of the Orce sites. These animals are found in other European sites between 1 and 1.5 million years ago but are absent in Orce, underscoring its older age. 

Evidence for the Gibraltar Passage 

This new dating aligns with other evidence suggesting that early hominids may have crossed into Europe via the Strait of Gibraltar. The presence of a lithic industry similar to that found in North Africa and the discovery of African fauna such as Hippopotamus and Theropithecus oswaldi in southern Spain support this theory. 

 “the existence of a lithic industry with similarities to that found in the north of the African continent and also the presence of remains of African fauna in the south of the peninsula, such as those of Hippopotamus, found in the sites of Orce, and those of Theropithecus oswaldi, an African primate similar to a baboon, found in the Victoria cave, a site near Cartagena (Murcia), non-existent anywhere else in Europe”. 

Key dated sites showing the world distribution of hominins before 1Ma (orange color) and potential dispersion routes (more European sites in Fig. 11). The figure shows sites with Oldowan technology (black dots) older than 2  Ma in Africa and older than 1Ma in Eurasia. White dots show the oldest Acheulian sites in Africa (>1.5  Ma) and in Eurasia (between 1 and 0.8Ma). The oldest Oldowan and Acheulian tools occur in East Africa at >2.5  Ma (26, 22,31) and>1.7Ma (23,27,32) respectively. In Asia, the oldest Oldowan and Acheulian occur in the Caucasus at 1.8  Ma (7) and in the Levant corridor at 1.2Ma (9) respectively. In Europe the oldest Oldowan and associated hominins occur in Spain (1,2) with a debated age 1.6–0.9  Ma. (Gilbet,L et al. /Earth Science Reviews) 

The research indicates a significant time gap between the oldest human occupations in Asia (1.8 million years ago) and Europe (1.3 million years ago), suggesting that hominids took longer to reach Europe due to biogeographical barriers. 

The Gibraltar route, which currently requires crossing up to fourteen kilometers (8.7 miles) of sea, may have been shorter in the past due to tectonic activity and sea level fluctuations. 

Since excavations began in 1982 by paleoanthropologist Josep Gibert, five human remains have been found at the Orce sites, including two humerus fragments and a cranial fragment. Despite initial controversy over the human provenance of these remains, independent studies confirmed their human origin. 

Further discoveries at Barranco León and Fuente Nueva 3, including two human molar teeth and thousands of Olduvayan lithic tools, have solidified evidence of early hominid presence in Orce. Cut marks on bones at these sites further corroborate human activity in the Early Pleistocene. 




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