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Environmental contexts during the Iberian Neanderthal Extinction: Insight from the ecology of ungulate preys - EnvINExt

Project description

How environmental changes impacted Neanderthal's decline and their preys

The Middle-to-Upper Palaeolithic transition in Europe between approximately 57 and 35 000 years before present was an important time in human evolution as it covers the period when anatomically modern humans (early modern humans) replaced the disappearing Neanderthals after they briefly coexisted. The EU-funded EnvINExt project will explore the environmental changes through time, to fill the knowledge gap between global climate changes and their impacts at a local scale on the behavior of past humans and their preys. To do so, it will study the feeding ecology of ungulate prey species, that both Neanderthals and early modern humans consumed, from 10 archaeological sites in northern Iberia during this transition. Ungulate teeth analyses will be performed to determine physiological, ecological and climatic information that mirrors past environments.

Objective

The Middle-Upper Paleolithic (MP-UP) transition is a key period for human evolution, as it corresponds to late Neanderthal’s disappearance and their replacement by Anatomically Modern Humans (AMH), after both species briefly co-occurred. This multifactorial event happened at different spatial and temporal scales across Europe. Climate constitutes a strong driver of species evolution. For Neanderthal, there is no consensus regarding the impact of climate on its disappearance, although it happened during the Marine Isotopic Stage 3, characterized by abrupt and rapid climatic oscillations. In order to track climate changes at the time of the Neanderthal’ demise and the evolutionary success of AMH, ecological proxies filling the gap between local environmental conditions and global climate changes are mandatory. Herbivore teeth are robust traps for physiological, ecological and climatic information and thus mirror past environments. EnvINExt implements three complementary ecological proxies on ungulates preyed by both human species from 10 archeological sites covering the MP-UP transition in North Iberia. Combined Dental Microwear Texture, Enamel Carbon and Oxygen stable Isotope and Molar Mesowear Analyses provide ecological information at three temporal scales, for a global overview of the paleoecology and paleoenvironment of preys and humans. EnvINExt has four objectives: (i) Exploring the ecology of ungulates, key preys for human populations, before, during and after the MP-UP transition, (ii) drawing paleoenvironmental inferences at the scale of the territories exploited by Neanderthals and AMH, (iii) thus, linking global climate changes with local environmental changes and asynchronous disappearances of Neanderthals through north Iberia during the MP-UP transition. Finally, (iv) to confront these results for northern Iberia, a refuge area, with what is obtained in southwestern France (Berlioz’s current postdoctoral work).

Coordinator

UNIVERSIDAD DE CANTABRIA
Net EU contribution
€ 165 312,96
Address
AVENIDA DE LOS CASTROS S/N
39005 Santander
Spain

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Region
Noroeste Cantabria Cantabria
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
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Total cost
No data