Stone tools in Ukraine offer oldest evidence of humans in Europe
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[March 07, 2024]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - A dating method based on cosmic rays has identified stone
tools found in western Ukraine as the oldest-known evidence of human
occupation in Europe - 1.4 million years ago - showing that the peopling
of the continent occurred hundreds of thousands of years earlier than
previously known.
Researchers said on Wednesday the stone tools - the most primitive kind
known - were initially unearthed in the 1970s near the town of Korolevo
in the Carpathian foothills along the Tysa river, close to Ukraine's
borders with Hungary and Romania. But their age had remained unclear.
The new method determined the age of the sediment layer containing the
stone tools, making this site critical for understanding how humans
first spread into Europe during warm spells - called interglacial
periods - that interrupted the Ice Age's grip on the continent.
The researchers concluded that the maker of the tools likely was Homo
erectus, an early human species that arose roughly 2 million years ago
and spread across Africa, Asia and Europe before disappearing perhaps
110,000 years ago.
"No bones were found at Korolevo, only stone tools. But the age suggests
that Homo erectus was the only possible human species at the time. We
know very little about our earliest ancestors. They used stone tools for
butchery and probably used fire," said Czech Academy of Sciences
archeologist Roman Garba, lead author of the research published in the
journal Nature.
Homo erectus was the first member of our evolutionary lineage with body
proportions similar to our species, Homo sapiens, though with a smaller
brain.
The tools, made of volcanic rock, were fashioned in what is called the
Oldowan style. While quite simple - flaked tools such as choppers,
scrapers or basic cutting instruments - they represent the dawn of human
technology.
Until now, the oldest-known evidence of humans in Europe was about
1.2-1.1 million years old from a site called Atapuerca in Spain.
The Korolevo findings provide insight into the route of the first human
expansion into Europe. Homo erectus fossils from 1.8 million years ago
are known from a Caucasus site in Georgia called Dmanisi. Coupled with
Korolevo, this suggests Homo erectus entered Europe from the east or
southeast, migrating along the Danube river, Garba said.
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A panoramic view of the Korolevo quarry in western Ukraine,
surrounded by archaeological sites is pictured in Korolevo, Ukraine,
August 12, 2021. Korolevo stone artefacts dating to about 1.4
million years ago are considered the earliest-known evidence of
human presence in Europe. Roman Garba/Handout via REUTERS
"Korolevo is the northernmost outpost found so far of what we
presume to be Homo erectus and is testimony to the intrepidness of
this ancestor," Czech Academy of Sciences geoscientist and study
co-author John Jansen added.
It has been notoriously difficult to determine the age of
Paleolithic sites like Korolevo. The study dated the tools, left by
their makers on a river bed, by determining when the layer bearing
the artifacts was buried under overlaying sediment.
"Earth is constantly bombarded by galactic cosmic rays. When these
rays - mainly protons and alpha particles - penetrate Earth's
atmosphere, they generate a secondary shower of particles - neutrons
and muons - that, in turn, penetrates into the subsurface,"
geoscientist and study co-author Mads Knudsen of Aarhus University
in Denmark said.
These particles react with minerals in rocks to produce radioactive
nuclides, a class of atoms. The sediment was dated based on the
ratio of two nuclides, thanks to their differing pace of radioactive
decay.
Europe was later colonized by other now-extinct human species
including Homo heidelbergensis and Neanderthals. Homo sapiens
evolved in Africa roughly 300,000 years ago, arriving in significant
numbers in Europe perhaps around 40,000-45,000 years ago.
The Homo erectus pioneers encountered a Europe inhabited by large
mammals including mammoths, rhinos, hippos, hyenas and saber-toothed
cats.
"Most likely they were scavengers, looking for carcasses left by
hyenas or other predators, but what attracted them to Korolevo was a
source of high-quality volcanic rock, very good for making stone
tools," Garba said.
The researchers suspect evidence of European human occupation even
older than Korolevo will turn up.
"The question is not 'if' but 'when' we will find a site of similar
or older age somewhere else in Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria or
Serbia," Garba said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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