4.8 Article

Revised age of late Neanderthal occupation and the end of the Middle Paleolithic in the northern Caucasus

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1018938108

Keywords

ultrafiltration; admixture

Funding

  1. Science Foundation of Ireland [08/RFP/EOB1478]
  2. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) [08/RFP/EOB1478] Funding Source: Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)

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Advances in direct radiocarbon dating of Neanderthal and anatomically modern human (AMH) fossils and the development of archaeostratigraphic chronologies now allow refined regional models for Neanderthal-AMH coexistence. In addition, they allow us to explore the issue of late Neanderthal survival in regions of Western Eurasia located within early routes of AMH expansion such as the Caucasus. Here we report the direct radiocarbon (C-14) dating of a late Neanderthal specimen from a Late Middle Paleolithic (LMP) layer in Mezmaiskaya Cave, northern Caucasus. Additionally, we provide a more accurate chronology for the timing of Neanderthal extinction in the region through a robust series of 16 ultrafiltered bone collagen radiocarbon dates from LMP layers and using Bayesian modeling to produce a boundary probability distribution function corresponding to the end of the LMP at Mezmaiskaya. The direct date of the fossil (39,700 +/- 1,100 C-14 BP) is in good agreement with the probability distribution function, indicating at a high level of probability that Neanderthals did not survive at Mezmaiskaya Cave after 39 ka cal BP (calendrical age in kiloannum before present, based on IntCal09 calibration curve). This challenges previous claims for late Neanderthal survival in the northern Caucasus. We see striking and largely synchronous chronometric similarities between the Bayesian age modeling for the end of the LMP at Mezmaiskaya and chronometric data from Ortvale Klde for the end of the LMP in the southern Caucasus. Our results confirm the lack of reliably dated Neanderthal fossils younger than similar to 40 ka cal BP in any other region of Western Eurasia, including the Caucasus.

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