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Fossil find could be Europe’s first humans

A fossilised jawbone and teeth found in a cave in northern Spain may have belonged to one of the first human ancestors to set foot in western Europe. The hominid has been identified as Homo antecessor, or pioneer man, a possible ancestor of both our own species and Neanderthals. The fossils date from between 1.1 million and 1.2 million years ago.

The find helps fill another gap in our understanding of the long march early humans made out of Africa. Stone tools and animal bones found with the hominid jaw also paint a vivid picture of the life of early cave-dwelling Europeans.

“The timing of the earliest human occupation of Europe has been controversial for many years,” said Professor Chris Stringer, an expert in early humans at the Natural History Museum in London, who was not involved directly in the research. “[This find] suggests that southern Europe began to be colonised from western Asia not long after humans had emerged from Africa — something which many of us would have doubted even five years ago.”

The fossils were discovered in the Sima del Elefante cave in Atapuerca in north-western Spain. Along with the hominid remains the research team found 32 rock fragments that were either stone tools or flakes produced by making the tools, suggesting that the hominids used the cave as a workshop among other things. There were numerous animal bones from a variety of species. Jose Bermudez de Castro at the National Research Centre on Human Evolution in Burgos, a member of the team that uncovered the fossils, said the early humans occupied a lush, warm, green paradise with plentiful water and lots of prey.

The animal bones found suggest that humans at the site were eating meat. “We have evidence of cut marks on bones,” he said. Although the jaw fragment is not much to go on, from previous fossils the researchers can guess that the cave people would have been around 1.7 metres high, with a brain three-quarters the size of ours.

Although the same species has been found at sites close to Sima del Elefante, the team are convinced this find is considerably older. They used three dating techniques to pin-point its age.

These are based on past changes in the Earth’s magnetic field, the known ages of other mammal species found with the jaw fragment and a new method that uses radioactive decay in sediments. — Guardian Newspapers Limited 2008

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