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Out of Africa: The path of Homo sapiens by Staff Writers Bonn, Germany (SPX) Jan 01, 2022
What routes did Homo sapiens take on his way from Africa to Europe and Asia in the previous millennia? The climatic conditions changed, and with them the living conditions. The advance was hampered in some places by deserts, in others by dense forests. Over the past twelve years, a team of researchers within the framework of the Collaborative Research Center 806 "Our Way to Europe" unraveled the complex interplay of cultural innovations and environment that shaped migrations. After completion of the interdisciplinary joint project, the researchers now present a book with the most important findings under the leadership of the Universities of Bonn and Cologne. The cradle of man is in Africa - this has been known for half a century. A decade ago, scholarly discussion was still dominated by the idea that a small group of Homo sapiens migrated from Africa to Europe about 70,000 years ago. Through anatomical and intellectual superiority, this group is said to have displaced archaic local populations as it advanced, leaving Homo sapiens as the only genetic branch of humanity to survive. "This notion has changed fundamentally since it became clear that Neanderthals contributed at least a small part to the genome of Homo sapiens," says paleobotanist Prof. Dr. Thomas Litt of the University of Bonn, principal editor of the book and deputy spokesman for the Collaborative Research Center. "Genetics doesn't quite tell the same story - or a different part of the story - as paleontology and archeology." The team therefore endeavored to better understand this controversial picture by analyzing information on the nature and environment, as well as the role of culture, of this prehistoric population dynamic. The researchers focused on different time periods: from the emergence of modern humans, their dispersal, the repopulation of Ice Age Europe, Neolithic settlement, and the migration of settled societies. The new findings show that not only a migration wave, but several African Homo sapiens populations followed a journey of up to 5,000 kilometers to Europe and Asia. Improved radiometric dating of Homo sapiens fossils further suggests that the area of origin of modern humans includes not only East Africa, but also South and Northwest Africa. The time scale of Homo sapiens now extends back to 300,000 years. Prof. Litt's team investigated when and where migration corridors or barriers existed from a paleoecological and paleoclimatological perspective.
No scientific evidence for the western route "This is one of the big question marks in the history of human settlement in the western Mediterranean," Litt says of this surprising finding. Evidently, the Strait of Gibraltar had been more of a barrier at the time due to strong ocean currents. "This leaves the Levant, the only permanent land bridge between Africa and Eurasia, as the key region as a migration route for modern humans," says Litt. His research group conducted intensive research on drill cores, for example from the Dead Sea or the Sea of Galilee, in which plant pollen is preserved. This allows changes in vegetation cover to be identified and environmental and climatic conditions to be reconstructed. Litt: "These data illustrate that the Levant could only have served as a corridor when, under more favorable conditions, for example, neither deserts nor dense forests impeded the advance."
Almost one hundred researchers were involved The main results are now summarized in the 372-page book jointly edited by the paleobotanist Prof. Dr. Thomas Litt (Bonn), the prehistorian Prof. Dr. Jurgen Richter and the geography didactician Prof. Dr. Frank Schabitz (both University of Cologne). "The book should be attractive and relevant to all readers interested in understanding the prehistory of our own species, its migratory routes and motivations for migration triggered by complex interactions of its culture and environment," says Litt.
Research Report: "The Journey of Modern Humans from Africa to Europe - Culture-Environmental Interaction and Mobility"
New dates for Viking trade Aarhus, Denmark (SPX) Jan 01, 2022 Mobility shaped the human world profoundly long before the modern age. But archaeologists often struggle to create a timeline for the speed and impact of this mobility. An interdisciplinary team of researchers at the Danish National Research Foundation's Centre for Urban Network Evolutions at Aarhus University (UrbNet) has now made a breakthrough by applying new astronomical knowledge about the past activity of the sun to establish an exact time anchor for global links in the year 775 CE. In colla ... read more
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