PlumX Metrics
Embed PlumX Metrics

East-to-west human dispersal into Europe 1.4 million years ago

Nature, ISSN: 1476-4687, Vol: 627, Issue: 8005, Page: 805-810
2024
  • 6
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 52
    Captures
  • 184
    Mentions
  • 305
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    6
  • Captures
    52
  • Mentions
    184
    • News Mentions
      161
      • News
        161
    • References
      17
      • Wikipedia
        17
    • Blog Mentions
      6
      • Blog
        6
  • Social Media
    305
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      305
      • Facebook
        305

Most Recent Blog

Early Human Presence in Europe: Stone Tools and Nuclides Reveal Ancient Origins

High-energy particles from supernova explosions, reaching Earth after millions of years, have paved the way for a groundbreaking discovery: the earliest evidence of human presence in Europe. Scientists utilized cosmogenic nuclides to date stone tools unearthed in Korolevo, Ukraine, pinpointing human habitation to 1.4 million years ago. Possible human dispersal routes shown by arrows and a selectio

Most Recent News

Hallada en Atapuerca la cara del europeo occidental más antiguo

Meave Leakey, figura icónica de la paleoantropología perteneciente a una legendaria saga científica que ha desenterrado buena parte de la historia de nuestros ancestros en África, respondía hace unos años con cierto humor a la pregunta de cuándo tendremos un dibujo claro de la evolución humana: "En unos cien años, o así". No es de extrañar que lo fiara tan largo, cuando cada hallazgo es una nueva

Article Description

Stone tools stratified in alluvium and loess at Korolevo, western Ukraine, have been studied by several research groups since the discovery of the site in the 1970s. Although Korolevo’s importance to the European Palaeolithic is widely acknowledged, age constraints on the lowermost lithic artefacts have yet to be determined conclusively. Here, using two methods of burial dating with cosmogenic nuclides, we report ages of 1.42 ± 0.10 million years and 1.42 ± 0.28 million years for the sedimentary unit that contains Mode-1-type lithic artefacts. Korolevo represents, to our knowledge, the earliest securely dated hominin presence in Europe, and bridges the spatial and temporal gap between the Caucasus (around 1.85–1.78 million years ago) and southwestern Europe (around 1.2–1.1 million years ago). Our findings advance the hypothesis that Europe was colonized from the east, and our analysis of habitat suitability suggests that early hominins exploited warm interglacial periods to disperse into higher latitudes and relatively continental sites—such as Korolevo—well before the Middle Pleistocene Transition.

Bibliographic Details

R. Garba; V. Usyk; L. Ylä-Mella; J. Kameník; K. Stübner; J. Lachner; G. Rugel; F. Veselovský; N. Gerasimenko; A. I. R. Herries; J. Kučera; M. F. Knudsen; J. D. Jansen

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Multidisciplinary

Provide Feedback

Have ideas for a new metric? Would you like to see something else here?Let us know