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Chronometric data and stratigraphic evidence support discontinuity between Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens in the Italian Peninsula.

Thomas HighamMarine FrouinKaterina DoukaAnnamaria RonchitelliPaolo BoscatoStefano BenazziJacopo CrezziniVincenzo SpagnoloMaxine McCartyGiulia MarcianiArmando FalcucciMatteo RossiniSimona ArrighiClarissa DominiciThibaut DevieseJean-Luc SchwenningerIvan MartiniAdriana MoroniFrancesco Boschin
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
The process by which Palaeolithic Europe was transformed from a Neanderthal-dominated region to one occupied exclusively by Homo sapiens has proven challenging to diagnose. A blurred chronology has made it difficult to determine when Neanderthals disappeared and whether modern humans overlapped with them. Italy is a crucial region because here we can identify not only Late Mousterian industries, assumed to be associated with Neanderthals, but also early Upper Palaeolithic industries linked with the appearance of early H. sapiens, such as the Uluzzian and the Aurignacian. Here, we present a chronometric dataset of 105 new determinations (74 radiocarbon and 31 luminescence ages) from four key southern Italian sites: Cavallo, Castelcivita, Cala, and Oscurusciuto. We built Bayesian-based chronometric models incorporating these results alongside the relative stratigraphic sequences at each site. The results suggest; 1) that the disappearance of Neanderthals probably pre-dated the appearance of early modern humans in the region and; 2) that there was a partial overlap in the chronology of the Uluzzian and Protoaurignacian, suggesting that these industries may have been produced by different human groups in Europe.
Keyphrases
  • deep learning
  • artificial intelligence
  • data analysis