Early humans ventured farther north than thought

Palaeontologist Simon Parfitt shows a newly discovered fossil of hyena droppings found in a United Kingdom river deposit, during a press conference to reveal the findings at the Royal Institution in London, Wednesday, July 7, 2010. The finds, revealed in this week's Nature magazine, indicate that early humans were living in northern Europe more than 780,000 years ago and tell us more about the dispersal of early humans out of Africa and will likely prompt a re-evaluation of the adaptations and capabilities of early humans.
(AP Photo/Sang Tan)
Early humans ventured farther north than thought
By Raphael G. Satter, Associated Press Writer
50 mins ago
LONDON – Ancient man ventured into northern Europe far earlier than previously thought, settling on England's east coast more than 800,000 years ago, scientists said.
It had been assumed that humans — thought to have emerged from Africa around 1.75 million years ago — kept mostly to relatively warm tropical forests, steppes and Mediterranean areas as they spread across Eurasia.
But the discovery of a collection of flint tools some 135 miles (220 kilometers) northeast of London shows that quite early on man braved colder climes.
"What we found really undermines traditional views about how humans spread and reacted to climate change," said Simon Parfitt, a University College London researcher. "It just shows how little we know about the movement out of Africa."
About 75 flint tools have been found at the site near Happisburgh, a seaside hamlet in Norfolk, Parfitt and colleagues report in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.
The researchers dated the artifacts to somewhere between 866,000 to 814,000 years ago or 970,000 to 936,000 years ago. That's at least 100,000 years before the earliest known date for British settlement, in nearby Pakefield.
Exactly what kind of humans made these tools is unknown.
"It is impossible to guess who those people were without fossil evidence," said Eric Delson, an anthropologist at Lehman College of the City University of New York, who was not involved in the research.
Mammoths and saber-toothed cats roamed the area at that time, and the River Thames flowed into the sea there — about 150 kilometers (90 miles) to the north of where its mouth is today. The climate was a little colder than now, at least during the winter.
The Natural History Museum's Chris Stringer, another of the paper's authors, said living in such an environment would have been challenging. Thick forests meant a poor supply of edible plants and dispersed prey. In the winter, there would be less daylight for hunting and foraging. Then, of course, there was the cold.
"For humans that have not long emerged from the tropic and the subtropics, that is something," Stringer said. "There's always been the view that that the cold was holding them back."
But the find suggests that it didn't. So how did these humans adapt? The researchers said the mix of a tidal river, marshes and coastline at the site might have helped, providing seaweed, tubers, and shellfish when prey was scarce.
"We could imagine these people exploiting the slow-flowing banks of the Thames, just as today," Stringer said.
Co-author Nick Ashton, with the British Museum in London, said there was still considerable uncertainty about how they adapted.
"Have they got effective clothing? Have they got effective shelters? Have they got controlled use of fire?" he said, adding that the find "provides more questions than answers."
Delson said that the discovery helped complete Europe's patchy prehistoric record.
"We don't know much, but we're increasing our knowledge of the earliest phases of what went on in Europe," he said. "It's one more piece of the puzzle."
Stringer, meanwhile, said he hoped more discoveries could be made along the coastline. He noted that he had already seen the chronology of human habitation in Britain pushed back, and then pushed back again.
"Now I'm thinking: 'Who knows, can we go back even further?'"
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Online:
Article: HERE
An artist's impression of Happisburgh, Norfolk, more than 800,000 years ago, when scientists believe it was occupied by an ancient race of humans
'Cannibal' Britons arrived here for first time 950,000 years ago - and lived in Norfolk
By Fiona Macrae
7th July 2010
Norfolk is the cradle of British civilisation, according to a landmark study.
Primitive humans landed in East Anglia up to 950,000 years ago and settled near what is today the village of Happisburgh.
There were several thousand of them
- characterised by low
foreheads, heavy brows and possible cannibalistic tendencies - hunting
fish, mammoths, giant elk and deer.
This has forced them to rewrite our island's history.
It had been thought the first humans reached Britain from the continent about 700,000 years ago, settling in Pakefield in Suffolk, when it was significantly warmer than a million years ago.
But the Norfolk find - detailed in the journal Nature - tells us that ancient Britons had the know-how to survive in much harsher climes. They would have entered Britain via the land bridge that then joined our country to mainland Europe.
Dr Nick Ashton, an archaeologist at
the British Museum,
said:
'The new flint artefacts are incredibly important because, not only are
they much earlier than other finds, but they are associated with a
unique array of environmental data that gives a clear picture of the
vegetation and climate.
Archaeologists excavate the site close to the seashore at Happisburgh, Norfolk
'This demonstrates early humans
surviving in a cooler
climate
than that of the present day.' The estuarine site, 135 miles north-east
of London, lay on an ancient course of the Thames, and was surrounded
by a cpnifer forest.
Newly discovered artefacts and fossils found in the river bank in Norfolk which show prehistoric man was living in the UK more than 900,000 years ago
Archaeologist Nick
Ashton shows some
newly
discovered tool fragments
Mammoths, rhinos, elephants, sabre-toothed cats, horses, elks, deer, voles, and hyenas as big as lions roamed the banks.
The climate was similar to that of
modern-day southern
Scandinavia. Summer temperatures were like those of modern Britain -
but winters-were long and harsh, with average temperatures of between
0c (32f) and minus 3c (27f).
Scientists dig at the site on the Norfolk coast which has unearthed a treasure trove of fossils
Fossilised remains of 'Norfolk Man' have yet to be unearthed.
But scientists said it is likely he was related to Pioneer Man - hailed as Europe's oldest inhabitant when his remains were uncovered in northern Spain in 1994.
Pioneer Man, or
Homo antecessor, is
rumoured to have had a
taste for human flesh. But in many other ways, he was rather like us.
An artist's impression of Happisburgh, Norfolk, more than 800,000 years ago, when scientists believe it was occupied by an ancient race of humans
Professor Chris Stringer, of the Natural History Museum, said: 'This was a species that was fully human in terms of walking upright.
'This was no ape man. They had quite large brains, they were relatively advanced humans but still lacking a number of modern human features. They still had a strong brow and low forehead.'
The find takes the number of separate waves of colonisation of what is now Britain to nine.
A Brutal existence
The Thames was the lifeblood of Norfolk Man.
He roamed the mud flats and marshes of its estuary and the nearby coastline looking for prey to hunt.
Animals on the menu ranged from elephants, mammoths, rhinos, and giant elk to voles and mice.
Seaweed, tubers and shellfish would have helped satisfy his appetite when prey was scarce.
There is also evidence that Norfolk Man may have had a taste for human flesh.
In turn, he would have been hunted by sabretoothed cats and hyenas.
There are no caves in the area, suggesting he built primitive shelters to keep out the cold.
Article: HERE




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