4.7 Article

Ecological evaluation of the development of Neanderthal niche exploitation

Journal

QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 310, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.108127

Keywords

Paleoecology; Environmental factors; Adaptation; Palaeolithic

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This study provides a detailed characterization of the ecological niche occupied by Neanderthals and their ancestors in Western Eurasia, including the biomes, climatic zones, and other environmental factors. It reveals that these hominins adapted to a wide range of climates, from semi-arid to subarctic, and made conscious choices of shelters based on local microclimatic factors. The expansion of temperate-subpolar karst regions during glacial periods possibly affected their overwintering chances. Additionally, the risk of mosquito-borne diseases was more prominent in southern Europe, while tick-borne diseases were a concern in northern and central populations.
Understanding the ecological niche occupied by Neanderthals and their ancestors is at the forefront of many Palaeolithic investigations. In this study, a complex characterization of the environments once occupied by these hominins in Western Eurasia were performed. It included the determination of the biome and climatic zones occupied, the potential wind exposures, the classification of the karst regions where they lived, the direction of the entrance of caves inhabited and the average daily total solar irradiation values. In addition, the climatic suitability of the Mediterranean mosquito fauna, tick-borne encephalitis and four large mammal species as potential mammal hosts were also studied. It was found that Western Eurasian hominins occupied a wide ecological niche range from the semi-arid to the subarctic climates. Between the MIS20-MIS4 interval, the biomes occupied by Neanderthals and their ancestors shifted from the woodland-shrubland to the boreal biomes, indicating the increasing general biocultural adaptation to the more continental environments. These populations inhabited territories with weak to moderate wind exposure (Beaufort 2-5) and usually occupied caves with a south or southwest-oriented entrance. This habitat selection indicates the recognition of local microclimatic factors and a conscious choice of shelters. In the glacial periods, the increasing extension of temperate -subpolar karst regions at the expense of the more habitable subtropical karst areas might have adversely affected the overwintering chances of ancient western Eurasian populations in West, Central Europe, and Central Asia. The supraorbital area of ancient hominins with low receding foreheads and prominent supraorbital ridges may have been exposed to a greater risk of the development of frontal sinusitis and its complications than modern humans with more gracile skulls. Neanderthals and their predecessors were exposed to moderate average daily solar radiation values, although these values exhibit heterogenic picture in the comparison of Central and Southern Europe. While the southern European Neanderthal populations were dominantly exposed to the risk of mosquito-borne diseases, the northern and central populations could suffer from tick-borne diseases. However, both tick-borne encephalitis virus and its medium-large mammal hosts were present in most sites dwelled by Neanderthals and their ancestors.(c) 2023 The Author. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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