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New geological datings place the first European hominids in the south of the Iberian Peninsula 1.3 million years ago - EurekAlert


One of the most important controversies about human evolution and expansion is when and by what route the first hominids arrived in Europe from the African continent. Now, geological dating techniques at the Orce sites (Baza basin, Granada, Spain) place the human remains found in this area as the oldest in Europe, at approximately 1.3 million years old. These results reinforce the hypothesis that humans arrived in Europe through the south of the Iberian Peninsula, through the Strait of Gibraltar, instead of returning to the Mediterranean via the Asian route. The study, led by Lluís Gibert, researcher and lecturer at the University of Barcelona’s Faculty of Earth Sciences, has involved the participation of researchers from the Berkeley Geochronology Centre and Murray State University (United States).

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