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Modern humans were already in northern Europe 45,000 years ago

DNA from bones found in a cave in Germany has been identified as from Homo sapiens, showing that our species endured frigid conditions there as they expanded across the continent

By Michael Marshall

31 January 2024

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Early European humans may have hunted mammoths in a frozen landscape

Dorling Kindersley/Getty Images

When modern humans first began settling in Europe, they went straight to the cold north. A challenging excavation in Germany places our species in the region at least 45,000 years ago 鈥 and supports earlier claims that our ancestors were in Britain not long after.

鈥淭hese guys came into a landscape which was quite hostile,鈥 says at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. 鈥淚t was like northern Finland [today].鈥

Modern humans (Homo sapiens) are the most recent hominin to permanently settle in Europe, around 45,000 years ago. Previously, the continent was dominated for hundreds of thousands of years by Neanderthals, who vanish from the fossil record about 40,000 years ago. Modern humans and Neanderthals may have overlapped in France and Spain .

鈥淭he replacement of all archaic humans by Homo sapiens, between 50,000 and 40,000 years ago, is something that occurred all over Eurasia,鈥 says Hublin. It was a crucial period because for millions of years there had been multiple hominins coexisting, but now only one survived.

鈥淭his is the start of one species invading all the possible habitable niches on the Earth,鈥 says Hublin. 鈥淲e know it happened鈥 but we don鈥檛 know why and how it happened.鈥

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Each month, Michael Marshall unearths the latest news and ideas about ancient humans, evolution, archaeology and more.

New 女生小视频. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

The is mysterious. There are several types of stone artefacts from the period that could have been made by Neanderthals or modern humans. One, found in several sites in northern Europe, is the (LRJ) 鈥 characterised by long, leaf-shaped points that may have been fitted to spears. They had never been found in association with confidently identified hominin bones. 鈥淲e had no clue who made them,鈥 says Hublin.

To find out, Hublin and his colleagues visited several sites that had yielded LRJ artefacts. Unfortunately, previous archaeologists had destroyed the sites with crude excavation methods. The one exception was a cave called Ilsenh枚hle near Ranis, Germany. It collapsed thousands of years ago, so the initial excavations in the 1930s were difficult and some of the site remained undisturbed. Hublin鈥檚 team re-excavated it, digging a deep shaft down to the relevant sediment layer.

Stone tools from the LRJ at Ranis 1) partial bifacial blade point characteristic of the LRJ; 2) at Ranis the LRJ also contains finely made bifacial leaf points. Credit: Josephine Schubert, Museum Burg Ranis, License: CC-BY-ND 4.0. lithics from Ranis. At left, Jerzmanowice blade point, layer X (Museum Burg Ranis, IV 1328). At right, Bifacial leaf point (Museum Burg Ranis IV 1319), layer X.

So-called LRJ stone tools found at Ilsenh枚hle cave in Germany

Josephine Schubert, Museum Burg Ranis, (CC-BY-ND 4.0)

It was an 鈥渆xceptionally difficult鈥 excavation, says at Leiden University in the Netherlands, who wasn’t involved in the study.

Buried in the sediments, Hublin鈥檚 team found many fragments of bone. They also re-examined similar fragments from the original excavations. By analysing the collagen protein in the bones, they determined that 13 belonged to hominins. To identify them more precisely, the team extracted mitochondrial DNA, which people inherit solely from their mothers, from 11 of the fragments. 鈥淭hey are Homo sapiens,鈥 says Hublin.

The techniques used were 鈥渢op-notch鈥, says Soressi. She wants to see nuclear DNA as well, to be sure, because it is possible the individuals were hybrids with Neanderthal fathers 鈥 which mitochondrial DNA wouldn鈥檛 show. However, she says this is 鈥渧ery unlikely鈥.

The timing of H. sapiens occupying the Ilsenh枚hle fits with existing evidence. Hublin鈥檚 team previously showed that modern humans lived in Bacho Kiro cave in Bulgaria about 45,000 years ago. However, Ilsenh枚hle is much further north.

In a second study, Hublin鈥檚 colleagues used chemical evidence from preserved horse teeth to show that the climate in this part of Germany was cold at the time, especially between 45,000 and 43,000 years ago. Again, this fits prior evidence: in 2014, Hublin鈥檚 team showed that modern humans were living in Willendorf, Austria, north of the Alps, in a cold steppe-like environment .

A third study examines the animal bones from Ilsenh枚hle, revealing that the cave was mostly inhabited by cave bears and hyenas. The implication is that modern humans were only there intermittently.

This points to a 鈥渜uick occupation by small groups of 鈥榩ioneers鈥欌, says Soressi.

Similar claims have been made for the cave of Grotte Mandrin in France: it may have been briefly inhabited by modern humans 54,000 years ago, before Neanderthals reclaimed the site.

Now that the LRJ tools at Ilsenh枚hle have been associated with modern humans, it is reasonable to assume that other LRJ artefacts were also made by H. sapiens, says Hublin. This implies modern humans made it to Britain early on. Part of a jawbone found in Kents Cavern in Devon, England, had been tentatively identified as a modern human and dated to 鈥 and was found with LRJ artefacts.

Journal reference:

Nature

Journal reference:

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Journal reference:

Nature Ecology & Evolution

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