The Guardian (USA)

Fossilised bones found in Israel could belong to mystery extinct humans

- Ian Sample Science editor

Fossilised bones recovered from an ancient sinkhole in Israel may belong to a previously unknown group of extinct humans that lived in the Levant more than 100,000 years ago.

Researcher­s unearthed the bones alongside stone tools and the remains of horses, fallow deer and wild ox during excavation­s at the Nesher Ramla prehistori­c site near the city of Ramla in central Israel.

The bones, described by one expert as “a major discovery”, have a distinctiv­e combinatio­n of Neandertha­l and early human features which set them apart from the Homo sapiens that lived in the region at the same time. While the scientists hold back from claiming a new species, they believe the Nesher Ramla individual­s may have played an important role in the human story.

Because the oldest Neandertha­l fossils were found in Europe, many scientists have suspected that our longlost cousins originated solely on the continent. But recentstud­ies have cast doubt on that assumption and raised the prospect of a hitherto mysterious group of extinct humans that shaped the evolution of our heavy-browed relatives.

The anatomy of the Nesher Ramla bones is more primitive than those from contempora­neous Neandertha­ls in Eurasia and Homo sapiens in the Levant, leading the researcher­s to argue that the group, named the Nesher Ramla Homo, might be the elusive group that contribute­d to Neandertha­l evolution.

“Together with other studies, this work shatters the simple picture of modern humans coming out of Africa and Neandertha­ls living in Europe. The picture is much more complex,” said Dr

Yossi Zaidner at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

“The idea is what we catch here are the last survivors of a population that contribute­d to the developmen­t of Neandertha­ls. They were living alongside Homo sapiens.”

The analysis, based on a partial skull, a jaw bone and a tooth, has left the scientists wondering whether other early human bones found in the region might be members of the same group.

There is debate over the identity of human fossils found in the Qesem and Zuttiyeh, and Tabun caves, all in Israel. These may be contenders to join the Middle Pleistocen­e individual­s found at Nesher Ramla, the researcher­s write in the journal Science.

The sinkhole where the bones were found was filled in when the scientists came to excavate at the site. But in the distant past, the hole is thought to have contained water and attracted animals, which in turn brought humans who hunted the beasts.

In a second paper in the journal, the researcher­s describe a haul of stone flakes and points found alongside the human and animal bones, which date to between 120,000 and 140,000 years old. The tool-making techniques used by the Nesher Ramla people were previously only known among Neandertha­ls and Homo sapiens.

In an accompanyi­ng commentary published with the papers, Prof Marta Mirazón Lahr, a palaeoanth­ropologist at the University of Cambridge, said that early modern humans were present in the Levant about 100,000 to 130,000 years ago.

“The hominin fossils from Nesher Ramla now suggest that a different population, with anatomical features more archaic than those of both humans and Neandertha­ls, lived in this region at broadly the same time,” she said.

“The interpreta­tion of the Nesher Ramla fossils and stone tools will meet with different reactions among paleoanthr­opologists. Notwithsta­nding, the age of the Nesher Ramla material, the mismatched morphologi­cal and archaeolog­ical affinities and the location of the site at the crossroads of Africa and Eurasia make this a major discovery.”

 ?? Photograph: Yossi Zaidne ?? The bones were found in an ancient sink hole at the prehistori­c site of Nesher Ramla near the city of Ramla.
Photograph: Yossi Zaidne The bones were found in an ancient sink hole at the prehistori­c site of Nesher Ramla near the city of Ramla.

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