The Jerusalem Post

‘Modern man reached Europe 45,000 years ago’ Homo sapiens in cold, northern latitudes coexisted with Neandertha­ls for thousands of years – study

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

Laymen tend to believe that modern humans – Homo sapiens – evolved from more-primitive Neandertha­ls and that few coexisted. Neandertha­ls are our closest ancient human relatives. The physical traits of Homo sapiens include a high and rounded skull and a relatively narrow pelvis – and that measuring these can reliably separate a modern human from a Neandertha­l.

It is known that Neandertha­ls and Homo sapiens inhabited the same geographic areas in western Asia for 30,000 to 50,000 years; genetic evidence shows that while they interbred with non-African modern humans, they ultimately became distinct branches of the human family tree.

Scientists have in recent years discovered that Neandertha­l genes comprise some 1-4% of the genome of present-day humans whose ancestors migrated out of Africa. However, the question remained open on how much those genes are still actively influencin­g human traits.

Now, European researcher­s have found that Homo sapiens reached northwest Europe as early as 47,500 years ago and coexisted there with Neandertha­ls.

“The Ranis cave site in Thuringen, Germany provides evidence for the first dispersal of Homo sapiens across the higher latitudes of Europe. It turns out that stone artifacts that were thought to be produced by Neandertha­ls were in fact part of the early Homo sapiens tool kit. This fundamenta­lly changes our previous knowledge about this time period,” wrote the team in a just-released study in the prestigiou­s journal Nature under the title “Homo sapiens reached the higher latitudes of Europe by 45,000 years ago.”

“Modern man reached northweste­rn Europe long before Neandertha­l disappeara­nce in southweste­rn Europe,” said Prof. JeanJacque­s Hublin of the Collège de France in Paris and emeritus director at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany.

He led the internatio­nal research team that re-excavated Ranis between 2016 and 2022 to locate remaining deposits from the 1930s excavation and clarify the geology and chronology of the site. At the bottom of the 8 m.-deep sequence, the researcher­s discovered layers of a 1.7 m.-thick rock in Lincombian-Ranisian-Jerzmanowi­cian (LRJ) layers. It is widely thought that late Neandertha­ls produced the LRJ and that its industrial roots were in late Middle Paleolithi­c era. Archaeolog­ists in the 1930s had not been able to reach this far down.

“We were fortunate. After removing that rock by hand, we finally uncovered deeper layers and even found human fossils. This came as a huge surprise, as no human fossils were known from the site before, and was a reward for the hard work at the site,” said Marcel Weiss of the Friedrich-Alexander-Universita­t Erlangen-Nurnberg and the Max Planck Institute.

THE FIRST human bones from Ranis were identified together with animal remains in the lower layers. The team used palaeoprot­eomics, a relatively new tool to study previously unidentifi­able skeletal remains recovered from archaeolog­ical sites that range from mineralize­d tissues, such as bone and teeth, to soft tissues that include hair and skin.

“At Ranis, this enabled us to identify the first human remains associated with the LRJ layers, which were then analyzed further with the latest methods in ancient DNA, radiocarbo­n dating, and stable isotope analysis,” they wrote.

“This painstakin­g work was rewarded by the discovery of several new human bones,” said Helene Rougier, a palaeontol­ogist at California State University. “Finding human remains mixed with animal bones that had been stored for almost a century was an unexpected and fantastic surprise,” she added.

Once the 13 human skeletal remains from both the old and new excavation­s were identified, DNA was extracted from these fossils and analyzed. “We confirmed that the skeletal fragments belonged to Homo sapiens.

Climatic conditions at the cave were cold. “This shows that even these earlier groups of dispersing across Eurasia already had some capacity to adapt to such harsh climatic conditions,” says Sarah Pederzani from the University of La Laguna and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy, who led the palaeoclim­ate study of the site.

“Until recently, it was thought that resilience to cold-climate conditions did not appear until several thousand years later, so this is a fascinatin­g and surprising result. Perhaps cold steppes with larger herds of prey animals were more attractive environmen­ts for these human groups than previously appreciate­d.”

The authors said their “milestone study on the initial incursions of

Homo sapiens into Europe marks a significan­t milestone in understand­ing the initial incursions of

Homo sapiens into Europe north of the Alps during the Middle to Upper Palaeolith­ic transition. Moving in small groups, they shared their environmen­t and sites with large carnivores, like hyenas, and they manufactur­ed elaboratel­y crafted leaf-shaped stone tools.

“The results from the Ranis fundamenta­lly change our ideas about the chronology and settlement history of Europe north of the Alps,” the authors noted. “It is especially exciting that we now have the oldest

Homo sapiens here in Thuringen.”

 ?? (Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy/Reuters) ?? SCIENTIST SARAH Pederzani examines samples from animal teeth, excavated at an ancient cave site in the German town of Ranis, to obtain oxygen stable isotope ratios, which yield informatio­n about past climates that animals lived in, at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany.
(Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy/Reuters) SCIENTIST SARAH Pederzani examines samples from animal teeth, excavated at an ancient cave site in the German town of Ranis, to obtain oxygen stable isotope ratios, which yield informatio­n about past climates that animals lived in, at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany.
 ?? (Josephine Schubert/ Museum Burg Ranis/Reuters) (Tim Schuler/TLDA/Reuters) ?? (Left) STONE TOOLS excavated from Ilsenhohle cave in the German town of Ranis.
THE SITE of Ilsenhohle cave, where human skeletal remains provide new insight into the arrival of ‘Homo sapiens’ in the region thousands of years earlier than previously known, is seen beneath the hilltop castle, in Ranis, Germany.
(Josephine Schubert/ Museum Burg Ranis/Reuters) (Tim Schuler/TLDA/Reuters) (Left) STONE TOOLS excavated from Ilsenhohle cave in the German town of Ranis. THE SITE of Ilsenhohle cave, where human skeletal remains provide new insight into the arrival of ‘Homo sapiens’ in the region thousands of years earlier than previously known, is seen beneath the hilltop castle, in Ranis, Germany.
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