French find puts humans in Europe 200,000 years earlier
Experts on prehistoric man are rethinking their dates after a find in
a southern French valley suggested our ancestors may have reached Europe
1.57 million years ago: 200,000 years earlier than we thought.
What provoked the recount was a pile of fossilised bones and teeth
uncovered 15 years ago by local man Jean Rouvier in a basalt quarry at
Lezignan la Cebe, in the Herault valley, Languedoc.
In the summer of 2008, Rouvier mentioned his find to Jerome Ivorra,
an archaeological researcher at France's National Centre for Scientific
Research (CNRS). The subsequent dig uncovered a large variety of ancient
animal bones: cattle, deer, horses and also of carnivorous animals
related to cats and dogs.
More importantly however, about 10 metres (yards) down and under the
basalt layer, the team found 20 or so tools, most of which bore traces
of use.
The surprise came when argon dating showed the site went back 1.57
million years - substantially older than many other prehistoric sites -
according to a paper published in the specialist journal, Comptes Rendus
Palevol.
It is older, for example, than the Spanish site at Atapuerca, which
dates back a mere 1.2 to 1.1 million years.
And as the paper pointed out, the existence of such man-made objects
in Europe was extremely rare in this period. In comparison, the first
such tools in East Africa date back to 2.5 million years ago, while
human settlements in the Transcaucasia region date back to a 1.8 million
years ago.
"A discovery as rich as the one in the Herault Valley offers a real
opportunity to better understand the Europe of this period," said a
statement from the CNRS, France's Museum of National History and the
College de France.
More digs were planned for 2010 to discover more about the site, the
statement added.
AFP |