A partial human skull unearthed in 2008 in northern Israel
may hold some clues as to when and where humans and Neanderthals might have
interbred. The key to addressing this, as well as other important issues, is
precisely determining the age of the skull. A combination of dating methods,
one of them performed by Dr. Elisabetta Boaretto, head of the Weizmann
Institute's D-REAMS (DANGOOR Research Accelerator Mass Spectrometry)
laboratory, has made it possible to define the period of time that the cave was
occupied and thus the skull's age. The combined dating provides evidence that Homo
sapiens and Homo neanderthalensis could have lived side by side in
the area.
The
Manot Cave, a natural limestone formation, had been sealed for some 15,000
years. It was discovered by a bulldozer clearing the land for development, and
the first to find the partial skull, which was sitting on a ledge, were
spelunkers exploring the newly-opened cave. Five excavation seasons uncovered a
rich deposit, with stone tools and stratified occupation levels covering a
period of time from at least 55,000 to 27,000 years ago.
Dating
the skull presented a number of difficulties. "Because it was already
removed from the layer where it was presumably deposited," says Dr.
Elisabetta Boaretto, "we had to look for clues to tell us where and when
it belonged in the setting of the archaeological record in the cave."
The
age of the skull was first determined to be 54.7 thousand years old by a
technique known as the uranium-thorium method, which was applied to the thin
mineral deposit on the skull. But the estimated possible error in that type of
method is plus or minus 5.5 thousand years. To obtain independent confirmation
of the date, a different type of dating was required, e.g., radiocarbon dating.
To
narrow down the possible range of the skull's age and determine when the
skull's owner had lived in the cave, the archaeological team led by Prof.
Israel Hershkovitz of Tel Aviv University, Dr. Ofer Marder of Ben Gurion
University and Dr. Omry Barzilai of the Israel Antiquities Authority turned to
Dr. Boaretto. She and her team participated in the excavation of the cave and
applied radiocarbon dating to carefully selected charcoal remains, so that the
whole cave, and thus the timing of human occupation, was mapped.
The agreement
between the two methods -- carbon and uranium-thorium -- provided the necessary
support for the "correction" in the original uranium-thorium dating
of the skull, which then helped fix the true age of the skull at around 55,000
years.
The
date and shape of the Manot Cave skull provides some intriguing evidence that
humans and Neanderthals might have interbred sometime during the human trek out
of Africa, most likely as the former passed through the Middle East before
spreading out north and east. The 55,000-year-old partial skull is the first
evidence of a human residing in the region at the same time as Neanderthals,
whose remains have been found at several nearby sites. Archaeologists are now
searching for more evidence of ancient human habitation in the cave.
If,
indeed, the mixing between humans and Neanderthals took place in this area, it
would suggest that the owner of the skull and his kin may have been the
ancestors of all modern non-Africans.
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