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The earliest human face of Western Europe.

Huguet Rosa, R Rodríguez-Álvarez, Xosé Pedro XP et al.

40074891 PubMed ID
46 Authors
2025-04-12 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HR
Huguet Rosa
RR
R Rodríguez-Álvarez
XP
Xosé Pedro XP
MM
Martinón-Torres María
MV
M Vallverdú
JJ
Josep J
LJ
López-García Juan Manuel
JL
JM Lozano
MM
Marina M
TM
Terradillos-Bernal Marcos
ME
M Expósito
II
Isabel I
OA
Ollé Andreu
AS
A Santos
EE
Elena E
SP
Saladié Palmira
PD
P de Lombera-Hermida
AA
Arturo A
ME
Moreno-Ribas Elena
EM
E Martín-Francés
LL
Laura L
AE
Allué Ethel
EN
E Núñez-Lahuerta
CC
Carmen C
VD
van der Made Jan
JG
J Galán
JJ
Julia J
BH
Blain Hugues-Alexandre
HC
HA Cáceres
II
Isabel I
RA
Rodríguez-Hidalgo Antonio
AB
A Bargalló
AA
Amèlia A
MM
Mosquera Marina
MP
M Parés
JM
Josep Maria JM
MJ
Marín Juan
JP
J Pineda
AA
Antonio A
LD
Lordkipanidze David
DM
D Margveslashvili
AA
Ann A
AJ
Arsuaga Juan Luis
JC
JL Carbonell
EE
Eudald E
BD
Bermúdez de Castro José María
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Who the first inhabitants of Western Europe were, what their physical characteristics were, and when and where they lived are some of the pending questions in the study of the settlement of Eurasia during the Early Pleistocene epoch. The available palaeoanthropological information from Western Europe is limited and confined to the Iberian Peninsula1,2. Here we present most of the midface of a hominin found at the TE7 level of the Sima del Elefante site (Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain), dated to between 1.4 million and 1.1 million years ago. This fossil (ATE7-1) represents the earliest human face of Western Europe identified thus far. Most of the morphological features of the midface of this hominin are primitive for the Homo clade and they do not display the modern-like aspect exhibited by Homo antecessor found at the neighbouring Gran Dolina site, also in the Sierra de Atapuerca, and dated to between 900,000 and 800,000 years ago3. Furthermore, ATE7-1 is more derived in the nasoalveolar region than the Dmanisi and other roughly contemporaneous hominins. On the basis of the available evidence, it is reasonable to assign the new human remains from TE7 level to Homo aff. erectus. From the archaeological, palaeontological and palaeoanthropological information obtained in the lower levels of the Sima del Elefante and Gran Dolina sites4-8, we suggest a turnover in the human population in Europe at the end of the Early Pleistocene.

Chapter III

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