Nobody's land? The oldest evidence of early Upper Paleolithic settlements in inland Iberia
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Sala, Nohemi; Alcaraz Castaño, Manuel; Arriolabengoa, Martin; Martínez Pillado, Virginia; Pantoja Pérez, Ana; Rodríguez Hidalgo, Antonio; Téllez, Edgar; Cubas, Miriam; Castillo, Samuel; Arnold, Lee J.; Demuro, Martina; Duval, Mathieu; Arteaga Brieba, Andion; Llamazares, Javier; Ochando, Juan; Cuenca Bescós, Gloria; Marín Arroyo, Ana Belén


Fecha
2024Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International © 2024 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial license 4.0 (CC BY NC).
Publicado en
Science Advances, 2024, 10(26), eado3807
Editorial
American Association for the Advancement of Science
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Resumen/Abstract
The Iberian Peninsula is a key region for unraveling human settlement histories of Eurasia during the period spanning the decline of Neandertals and the emergence of anatomically modern humans (AMH). There is no evidence of human occupation in central Iberia after the disappearance of Neandertals ~42,000 years ago until approximately 26,000 years ago, rendering the region "nobody's land" during the Aurignacian period. The Abrigo de la Malia provides irrefutable evidence of human settlements dating back to 36,200 to 31,760 calibrated years before the present (cal B.P.) This site also records additional levels of occupation around 32,420 to 26,260 cal B.P., suggesting repeated settlement of this territory. Our multiproxy examination identifies a change in climate trending toward colder and more arid conditions. However, this climatic deterioration does not appear to have affected AMH subsistence strategies or their capacity to inhabit this region. These findings reveal the ability of AMH groups to colonize regions hitherto considered uninhabitable, reopening the debate on early Upper Paleolithic population dynamics of southwestern Europe.
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