User:Nicolas Perrault III/List of Neanderthals
The following is an attempt at an exhaustive list of Neanderthal specimens. Sites are first ordered by country (by their westernmost site), then within countries by site west-to-east.
The sex is given when known. When in brackets, (♂) or (♀), the sex is presumed based on traits that tend to differ between males and females (e.g., bone robusticity). When not in brackets, ♂ or ♀, the sex has been inferred from associated pelvic remains, the only way of assessing the sex with virtual certainty. [♀] means that I haven't checked whether it's one or the other.
Note that no date younger than 40 ka is recognised as legitimate by prehistorians. Decontamination work from 2011 onwards has revealed that up to 70% of pre-2011 radiocarbon dates are likely contaminated with modern radiocarbon, yielding dates that appear too young. Here, all pre-2011 radiocarbon (but not TL or ESR) dates are square-bracketed, e.g., [40 ka]. Dates that appear younger than 40 ka (calibrated) are additionally marked by an asterisk, e.g., [39* ka], because as of 2017 no date this young is universally recognised as legitimate.
The MNI is the minimum number of identified specimens. Ideally, this number is evaluated by palaeoanthropologists and reported, in which case it appears out of brackets. When in brackets, e.g., (3), it refers to the minimum number of specimens I could identify in the literature. A palaeoanthropologist will sometimes report the "minimum number of human individuals" in a site where the only human bones identified are Neanderthal bones. This is not good enough: Because one cannot assume that undiagnostic human bones are from Neanderthals, to be included here out of brackets, the palaeoanthropologist must explicitly report the minimum number of Neanderthal individuals.
Number of rare monographies I ordered through interlibrary loans at five pounds a piece to compile parts of this list: 7.
Early European Neanderthals (before 130 ka)
[edit]Present-day country (country of discovery) | Site | Principal Neanderthal finds | MNI | Geological age (ka) | Descriptions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spain, Basque country | Lezetxiki | Humerus | 1 | 164 ± 9[1] | Basabe (1966)[2] | |
UK, Jersey | La Cotte de St Brelade | St. Brelade 1: Adult, 13 teeth (I2-l, P4-l, M1-l, M1-r, M3-l, M3-r (crown), I1-r, C1-l, P3-l, P4-l, M2-l, M2-r, M3-r)
|
1 | OIS 6[3]: 587 | Keith and Knowles (1912a,[4] b)[5] Stringer and Currant (1986)[6] |
Three teeth are casts, the originals having been lost.[6] An occipital fragment of a child was found in 1915. Angel and Coon (1954)[7] argued it to be a Neanderthal, but to Stringer and Currant (1986) "it seems preferable to maintain caution about the firm attribution of the occipital fragment to a Neanderthal child, while admitting its possibility".[6]: 158 |
France | Biache Saint-Vaast | B1: Cranial frags. and 11 teeth (♀)
B2: Cranial frags. (♂) |
2 | 175 ± 13 (TL)
263+53/–37 (ESR) |
Perhaps pre-Neanderthals | |
France | Caune de l'Arago | More than 100 frags. | 26 | 400-350[8][9] | ||
France | Lazaret | Fragments | 3 | ≈130-100[10] | de Lumley and Piveteau (1969)
Puech and Albertini (1981) |
Resemble pre-Neanderthal remains[10] |
Belgium | Naulette | Toothless partial mandible | 1 | NA[11] | Dupont 1866[12] | Shows no characteristic Neanderthal trait, but falls between the metrical variation of Neanderthals and their predecessors.[11] |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
Bulgaria | Kozarnika | Infant radius[13] | 1 | 200-115[13] | Tillier et al. (2017)[13] | One of the very rare Neanderthal remains in Eastern Europe to the West of the Black Sea.[13] |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
Classic European Neanderthals (after 130 ka)
[edit]Present-day country (country of discovery) | Site | All Neanderthal finds | MNI | Geological age (ka) | Descriptions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UK, Gibraltar | Forbes' Quarry | G1: Cranium (♀) | (1) | NA[14] | Busk (1865)[15] | Second Neanderthal skull found, 1848 (after Engis 2, 1829). |
UK, Gibraltar | Devil's Tower | G2: 3-yr-old skull | (1) | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
France | La Quina (upstream) | LQ-H1: Right and left taluses LQ-H2: Occipital fragment |
(9) + (2)? [Note 2] | > 48[20][3] |
LQ5: Martin (1911)
LQ9: Martin (1926) |
|
France | Angles-sur-l'Anglin | One tooth (I1-l)[22] | 1 | GEOAGE | Patte (1960)[22] | NOTES |
France | La Ferrassie | LF1: Adult skeleton ♂
LF2: Adult skeleton ♀ |
7 | 74-68 | LF1: Boule (1921)
LF2: Same as LF1 LF8: Heim (1982) |
LF4: Newborn or elderly fetus,[19]: 37 likely part of Le Moustier 2.[25]
LF7: A talus bone, thought by Boule (1924) to represent a third adult, is probably part of LF3.[19]: 30–31 [23]: 6 |
France | Las Pélénos | 14 fragments 1950 exc.: 1 occipital bone fragment? 1 right maxillary fragment (I2 to M2) 1 left mandibular fragment (C1, P1, P2) 1 dental root fragment 2 other teeth (M2-l, I(sup)-l)
1995-2006 exc.: 1 right parietal 1 right parietal fragment. |
4 + (2)?[26][Note 3] | ? | Coulonges et al. (1952)[27]
Scolan et al. (2012)[26] |
|
France | Roc de Marsal | 3-yr-old skeleton
Isolated teeth |
2 | 90-60[28] | DESCR | |
France | Le Moustier | LM1: Partial 12-yr-old[29] skel. LM2: Neonate skeleton |
3 | 40 | LM1: Klatsch et al. 1909
LM2: Maureille 2002a, b[25] LM3: Lost with no description[30] |
M2 was announced by Peyroni (1921, 1930) but was lost and not found and described until 2002 by Maureille.[25] |
France | Le Regourdou[Note 4] | R1: Adult post-cranial skel.
R2: Foot bones |
2 | NA (≈70 ka by CS and BSt)[3]: 666 | R1: Piveteau (1959,[32] 1963,[33] 1964,[34] 1966)[35] R1 sternum: Vallois (1965)[36] R1 Pelvis: Meyer et al. (2011)[37] |
R1: Sex unknown[37][3]: 666 |
France | Malarnaud | 12-yr-old mandible | 1 | 150-100 | Heim et al. (1995) | The first Neanderthal to be found in France (1888).[38] |
France | La Chapelle-aux-Saints | LCAS 1: Adult skeleton ♂ 5 teeth Unnamed mature individual 1: P2-l
(Distal root of lower M)? Unnamed juvenile indiv. 1: ~3 yr-old, di1-r Unnamed juvenile indiv. 2: 11-12 yr-old, dm2-r (dm1-r)? |
4[39] | 56-47 | Boule (1908) Boule (1909) Rendu et al. (2014) for small newly found fragments of LCAS 1 and loose teeth |
For historical reasons, LCAS 1 remains the most famous Neanderthal.[40]: 15 |
France | Pech de l'Azé | P1: 2-yr-old partial skull
Isolated tooth |
2 | 51-41 | Patte (1957) | |
France | Saint-Césaire | S1: Fragmentary skeleton [♀]
S2: Skeleton |
2 | 40 | S2, Crevecoeur et al. team, not yet announced (Aug 2017) | |
France | Moula-Guercy | 78 fragments | 6 | ≈120-100 | DESCR | NOTES |
France | Combe-Grenal | "Several fragments" | ? | ≈190-30 | DESCR | NOTES |
France | Arcy-sur-Cure (Grotte des Fées) | (Arcy 3: Axis) | (1) | NA[3]: 292 [Note 5] | Hamy (1904)[41] | Arcy 3: "Possibly Neanderthaloid" (Leroi-Gourhan, 1958)[42] VERIFY, FIND ORIGINAL RECENT SOURCES FOR AN UPDATE ON THEIR ATTRIBUTION AND WHETHER THERE IS MORE |
France | Arcy-sur-Cure (Grotte du Renne) | Juvenile temporal bone
29 teeth Individual 1: Three 4-7 yr-old teeth (dm1-r, I2-l, P3-l) Ind. 3: Four 7-12 mo-old teeth (dm2-r, di1-r, di2-r, dm1-l) Ind. 4: Four 6-15 mo-old teeth (dm2-r, M1-r, dc1-r, dm1-r) |
6 [Note 6] | 48-42[44] or 47-40[45][46] | Parietal bone: Hublin et al. (1996)[47]
Teeth: Leroi-Gourhan (1958)[42] |
These Neanderthal remains are controversially argued associated with "symbolic" artefacts (jewellery) normally seen only in anatomically modern humans. |
France | Arcy-sur-Cure (Grotte du Bison) | P11-8: Partial maxillary, older adult 13 teeth T14: 9-12 yr-old milk tooth (dm2) |
11[48] + (2?)[49] [Note 7] | GEOAGE | Tillier et al. (2013a, b)[48][49] | |
France | Hortus | FINDS | 20 | ≈115-40[50] | de Lumley (1972)[50]
Mann and Trinkaus (1973)[51] |
NOTES |
France | Montgaudier | Juvenile mandible [♀] | 1 | — | DESCR | NOTES |
France | La Chaise | FINDS | ? | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
France | Les Rochers de Villeneuve | Partial femur shaft | 1 | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
France | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
France | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
France | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
North Sea, Dutch waters | — | Krijn: Frontal fragment (♂) | 1 | (≈ 100-40)[52][Note 8] | Hublin et al. (2009)[53] | This fragment was extracted from sea sediments in 2001 in Dutch territorial waters, 16 km off the coast of Domburg. This is the first Neanderthal found within modern Dutch territory,[53] although Engis 2 was discovered in what is now Belgium before its independence from the Netherlands.
"According to calculations it appears over 3000 times more likely that it is a Neanderthal fossil than a fossil from an anatomically modern human." (translation)[54][Note 9] |
Belgium | Trou de l’Abîme, Couvin | Tooth (dm2-r)[55] | 1 | [46-44][56] | Toussaint et al. (2010)[56] | |
Belgium | Spy | "S1" skull (?)[57]
"S2" skull (?) [57] "S2" leg bones (♂)
[58] |
(4?)[59][61][60][Note 12] | 42-41[60] | S1 and S2: J. Fraipont and Lohest (1886,[62] 1887)[63]
S6: Crevecoeur et al. (2010)[61] |
"Spy 1" and "Spy 2" are mixed collections of bones from an early (1886) excavation. Each may or may not represent more than one individual, and the skulls must hence be sexed separately from the limb bones.[58] |
Belgium | Goyet | FINDS | MNI | 41-40[65] | DESCR | NOTES |
Belgium | Scladina | S1: Child jaw frags., teeth | 1 | 127 +46/–32 ka [66] | Otte et al. (1993)[67] | |
Belgium (Netherlands) | Engis | E2: 2-3-yr-old partial cranium and maxilla | 1 | NA[68] | C. Fraipont (1936)[69] | First Neanderthal found (1829). |
Belgium | Fond(s)-de-Fôret[Note 14] | F1: Adult left femur | 1 | ? | Twiesselmann (1961)[70] | |
Belgium | Walou | Tooth (P3-l) | 1 | [42-40 ka][71] | Draily et al. (1999)[72]
|
The Neanderthal attribution used to be stratigraphic, not morphological,[71] but advances in teeth analysis has allowed a morphological attribution.[73] |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
Switzerland | Cotencher | Adult mandible (♀?) | 1 | ? | Bay (1984)[74] | |
Switzerland | Saint-Brais | Adult tooth (I1-l) | 1 | 40?[75]: 306 | Koby (1956)[76] | |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
Germany (N1: Prussia) | Neanderthal | N1: Adult calotte and 15 postcranial bones.[3]: 386 (†N2 (1895) or in older texts "Homo neanderthalensis II":[77] 64 new fragments in the 1997-2000 excavations.[78] |
3 | GEOAGE | N1: Fuhlrott and Schaaffhausen (1857)[79] Schaaffhausen (1888)[80] |
N1: The Neanderthal type specimen specimen discovered in 1856. Another individual, "Homo neanderthalensis II",[77] was discovered in 1895, presented at a conference in Dusseldorf in 1898, never studied, and last mentioned to exist in 1909.[77] It might have been destroyed in WW2.[77] 64 new fragments, representing at least three individuals, were found in gene-sequencing excavations between 1997 and 2000. At least three fragments belong to Neanderthal 1. |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
Croatia (Austria-Hungary) | Krapina | Krapina cranium A, juvenile (?) KC B, juvenile (♂?)[81]: 114 KC C (K3), young adult (♀)[81]: 114 KC D, adult (♂)[81]: 114 KC E, young adult (♀)[81]: 114 Parietal 16, adult (♂)[81]: 114 Parietal 17, juvenile (?)[81]: 114 Frontal 2, adult (♀)[81]: 114 Frontal 3, juvenile (?)[81]: 114 191 isolated teeth I1 (7 r-sup, 2 r-inf, 5 l-sup, 3 l-inf) 6 maxillas A: 8-yr-old (dm1-l, dm2-l) 11 mandibles A: 6-yr-old E: 15-yr-old Unassociated frontal fragments Unassoc. parietal fragments Unassoc. temporal fragments Unassoc. malar fragments Unassoc. nasal bones 21 scapulas Krapina 121: Type R2, juvenile[Note 15] 17 clavicles K142: Right, adult 20 humeri K159: Distal articular surface (L), adult 9 ulnas K179: Shaft (L), adult 11 radiuses K189: Proximal head and shaft (R), adult Wrist and hand bones K200: Right capitulum |
12[81] [Note 16] | ≈130[3]: 421 [Note 17] |
General: Gorjanović-Kramberger (1899-1929, 42 publications)
[Note 18]
[Note 19]
|
Krapina is an enormous collection of broken Neanderthal bones (over 850 fragments).[151] Excavated from 1899 to 1905,[151] it probably represents more than 20 individuals,[86][81]: 325 and possibly more than 70.[3]: 421 "All of the Krapina hominid remains are fragmentary. The cause is not the use of dynamite in the excavation of the material, as some [Coon (1962)] have suggested, but is most likely due to the practice of cannibalism." (Smith, 1976)[81]: 325 |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
COUNTRY | SITE | FINDS | MNI | GEOAGE | DESCR | NOTES |
European Russia | Mezmaiskaya | M1: Partial neonate skeleton
M2: 1-2-yr-old cranial frags. |
2 | 73-36 ka[152] | Golovanova et al. (1999)[153] | M1: Second Neanderthal whose mtDNA was studied[154] |
Total | (83) |
Southwest Asian Neanderthals (from 150 ka)
[edit]Present-day country (country of discovery) | Site | Principal Neanderthal finds | MNI | Geological age (ka) | Descriptions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turkey | Karain | Four teeth | 1 | — | Senyürek (1949)[155][156] | |
Lebanon | Ksâr 'Akil | K2: Teeth and partial maxilla | 1 | — | Ewing (1963)[158] | Ewing lost this specimen while transferring Ksar Akil material from Boston College to Fordham University.[159] |
Lebanon | El Masloukh | Upper second molar[160] | (1) | — | ? | Neanderthal attribution is stratigraphic, not morphological.[161] |
Israel | Kebara | KMH1: 7-9 mo. old partial skel.
KMH2: Post-cranial adult ♂ Various fragments KMH3: Milk tooth (m1-r)[162] |
21 + (10) | 64-59[165][166] | KMH1: Smith et al. (1977)[167]
KMH2: Arensburg et al. (1985)[168] |
Neanderthal attribution uncertain in KMH18-23, 25, 29, and 31[162][164] |
West Bank (Mandatory Palestine) | Shuqba | S-D1: Tooth and cranial frags.[160] | 1 | — | Keith (1931)[169] | |
Israel (Mandatory Palestine) | Tabun | T C1: Nearly complete adult ♀ T C2: Toothed mandible missing I1 (♂) Various fragments T E1: Right femur shaft (♂?) |
15 | ≈170-90 | McCown (1936) McCown and Keith (1939) |
T C1: Neanderthal attribution is not universally accepted.[173]
As of 1975, the whereabouts of T BC2, B3, and BC6 are unknown.[160]: 146 |
Israel | Ein Qashish | (EQH-2: Third molar)
EQH-3: Adult lower limbs |
1 + (1)[174] | 70-60[174] | Been et al. (2017)[174] | Discovered in 2013, these were the first diagnostically Neanderthal remains in Southwest Asia not found in a cave.[174]
EQH-2: 70% posterior probability that Neanderthal attribution is correct.[174] |
Israel | Shovakh | (Tooth, M(3)-l[175][Note 22]) | (1) | — | S. Binford (1966)[176] |
"[A]lthough within archaic and modern human ranges of variation, this complex occlusal morphology may suggest that it is more likely to have derived from a Neandertal than an early modern human". (Trinkaus 1987)[175] |
Israel | Amud | A1: Adult full skeleton ♂
A2: Maxillary fragment A7: 10-mo.-old partial skel. |
3[Note 23][177] | 61-53[177] | A1: Suzuki et al. (1970)[178]
A7: Rak et al. (1994)[179] |
|
Syria | Dederiyeh | D1: 19-30-month-old full skel.
D2: 21-30-month-old full skel. |
17 | — | D1: Akazawa et al. (1993)[180]
D2: Akazawa et al. (1999) [181] |
|
Iraq | Shanidar | S1: Adult partial skel. ♂ S2: Adult crushed skel. ♂ |
10 | S2, S4: > 100
Others: 60 |
S1: Stewart (1959)[182] S2: Stewart (1961)[183] |
Shanidar 2 and 4 are sometimes not treated as Neanderthals.
All but Shanidar 3 and 10 (and fragments of 5 excavated in 2015-2016)[187] may have been destroyed in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[3] |
Iran | Bawa Yawan | Lower left deciduous canine | 1 | ~43,600-~41,500 years ago[191] | Heydari-Guran et al (2021)[191] | |
Iran | Wezmeh | maxillary right premolar tooth | 1 | 70-40[192] | Zanolli et al. (2019)[192] | |
Iran | Bisitun | Adult radius shaft | 1 | — | Trinkaus and Biglari (2006)[193] | |
Total | 71 + (13) |
- ^ Martin (1912) describes the 1908-1912 finds that he names H1 (1908), H2 (1908), H2 (1910) [sic], H4 (1911), H5 (1911), H6 (1912), H7 (1912), H8 (1912), H9 (1912). Later in the same article, Martin discusses "H3", which he had not listed. It is apparent that the second H2 in his list is an error and was meant as H3.
- ^ Martin found nine groups of fragments (assumed "individuals") in Neanderthal layers dated 43-48 ka and older. Two more (LQ28 and LQ34) were discovered in 1988 and 1993, and are described in Verna (2006, a hard-to-find PhD thesis) and Verna et al. (2010). Heim (1976)[19]: 40 in his book on the La Ferrassie skeletons (vol. 1) claims that the La Quina remains belonged to a minimum of 27 individuals. Yet because he gives this figure in passing and does not cite his sources this figure cannot be used.
- ^ The MNI in the 1950 excavations was of 4. In the 1995-2006 excavations, it was of 2. Yet, the material of both excavations have not been compared, and these figures can therefore not be summed.
- ^ Alternatively written Le Régourdou and Le Regourdou (even in French).[31][32]
- ^ "[P]ossibly Middle Pleistocene" in the Catalogue of Fossil Hominids (1971)
- ^ The six come from the teeth alone. ("The preponderance of evidence, therefore, supports Neandertal affinity for the Châtelperronian-associated teeth at the Grotte du Renne, Arcy-sur-Cure. These teeth are fully Neandertal in their morphology, with no indication of evolution towards or admixture with anatomically modern humans", Bailey and Hublin, 2006).[43] There is a parietal bone that could increase the minimum number of individuals to 7, but nowhere is it written that it could be ascertained this parietal bone was not from the same individual as some of the teeth.
- ^ It is unclear whether the two new teeth discovered in 2012 and described in Tillier (2013b) can count towards new individuals or might be teeth of the known 11.
- ^ This geological age assignment is purely morphological.[52] To extract enough radiocarbon for direct dating would have required destroying the bone.[53]
- ^ In the original Dutch: "Volgens berekeningen blijkt het zelfs meer dan 3000 keer waarschijnlijker dat het gaat om een Neanderthaler fossiel dan om het fossiel van een anatomisch moderne mens."
- ^ Trinkaus (1980)[58]: 385 writes: "There has been considerable confusion regarding the sexing of the Spy Neanderthals. This is due in part to the difficulties involved in assigning sex to fossil crania (Genovés 1954; Smith, this volume) and in part to the mixed state of the Spy remains. Around the time of excavation the Spy Neanderthals became largely mixed, so that Fraipont & Lohest (1887) had to sort the bones on the basis of size and morphology. Hrdlička (1930) subsequently re-sorted the bones, and further analysis (Trinkaus, 1978) has shown that at least three adults plus a child are represented in the Spy sample. Furthermore, whereas it is possible to assign most of the limb bones to two adult skeletons (referred to as Spy 1 and 2), there is no necessary association between the Spy 1 cranium and the Spy 1 postcrania nor between the Spy 2 cranium and the Spy 2 postcrania."
- ^ Spy 3 is a child[59] that has recently been argued (by morphology and radiocarbon dating, Semal 2013)[60] not a Neanderthal, contrary to it's orignial attribution. Spy 4 is a modern human discovered in 1952 by Twiesselman (Semal 2013).[60] I could not find anything on Spy 5.
- ^ This number is a patchwork. Twiesselmann found a tibia that he called Neanderthal, but more recent morphological studies suggest it is anatomically modern and radiocarbon dating (2013) found the bone to be less than 5000 years old. Trinkaus (1978) claims three adults in the Spy 1 and 2 remains and Crevecoeur et al. (2010) claim to have found an additional child within the bones examined by Trinkaus. But Crevecoeur et al. do not discuss or recognise Trinkaus (1978)'s assessment of at least three adults in Spy 1 and 2. Nor does Trinkaus appear to have commented on Crevecoeur et al. (2010)'s article. At face value: At least three adults in Spy 1 and 2 plus the Spy 3 child (Trinkaus 1978) minus the Spy 3 child (Semal 2013). Spy 6 description in 2010 (Crevecoeur 2010). These figures add up to 4.
- ^ The 1886 discovery of S1 and S2 showed unlikely the early theory that Neanderthal 1 was a diseased modern human.[64]
- ^ Alternatively written Fond-de-Forêt, Fonds-de-Forêt, Fond de Forêt, and Fonds de Forêt.
- ^ Types are defined in Gorjanović-Kramberger (1926)[83]. R means right, L means left.
- ^ According to Smith (1976),[81]: 325 "[t]he exact number of individuals in the Krapina sample cannot be less than twelve. Estimates vary from twelve to over fifty. Most estimates are in the range of twenty-three to twenty-eight individuals. [...] The twenty-three to twenty-eight estimate seems reasonable but may be conservative because of the amount of material present." According to Trinkaus (1975),[86] who only worked on the lower limbs, "[a]ssociations of the bones by individual according to morphology and size suggest that at least 13 and probably between 20 and 30 individuals are represented by the Krapina lower limb remains". Without explaining himself or citing a source, Heim (1976:40) claims at least 14 individuals for the whole site of Krapina,[19]: 40 and so does the Catalogue of Fossil Hominids (1971).[87]: 339 According to the Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Human Evolution (2013), Krapina represents "a probable minimum of 70 individuals".[3]: 421 It's not clear what this means. By definition a "probable minimum" is not a minimum.
- ^ The large number of remains from Krapina may span as much as 50,000 years. Most remains are of unknown stratigraphic position. The following are of known position: Cranium A (Stratum 8, Würm I/II), Mandible C, Maxilla B (Str. 7, Würm I/II), Mandible G (Str. 6, Würm I), Maxilla C, Mandibles E and K (Str. 5, Würm I), Crania B, C, D, and E, Mandibles D and J, Maxilla D, E, and F (Str. 4, Riss-Würm), Parietal 16, Ramus 64, and Mandible H (Str. 3, Riss-Würm).[81]: 26
- ^ These are Gorjanović-Kramberger (1899,[88] 1900a,[89] b,[90] 1901,[91] 1902,[92] 1904,[93] 1905a,[94] b,[95] c,[96] d,[97] e,[98] f,[99] 1906a,[100] b,[101] c,[102] d,[103] 1907a,[104] b,[105] c,[106] d,[107] 1908a,[108] b,[109] c,[110] d,[111] e,[112] f,[113] 1909a,[114] b,[115] c,[116] d,[117] 1910a,[118] b,[119] c,[120] 1912,[121] 1913,[122] 1914a,[123] b,[124] c,[125] 1925,[126] 1926a,[127] b,[83] 1929).[128]
- ^ To Smith (1976)[81]: 8 , "[t]he most valuable aspect of [Gorjanović-Kramberger's 1906] monograph is undoubtedly the excellent descriptions of the Krapina hominid remains. These detailed and careful descriptions rank Gorjanović's monograph as one of the best ever published in hominid paleontology."
- ^ These are Adloff (1907a,[131] b,[132] 1908,[133] 1909,[134] 1910)[135]
- ^ These are Kallay (1949,[136] 1951,[137] 1952,[138] 1955a,[139] b,[140] c,[141] 1963,[142] 1969,[143] 1970a,[144] b,[145] c,[146] d)[147]
- ^ M?-r according to S. Binford (1966)[176].
- ^ Valladas, Mercier, and Froget (1999) write that "[o]f the remains of 18 individuals recovered at the Amud Cave, 15 were derived from unambiguous Middle Palaeolithic contexts, all of them located in the northern area of the excavation (Hovers et al., 1995). The stratigraphic distribution of these remains encompasses the layers B1 and B2, with only a single specimen derived from layer B4 (Sakura, 1970). Three individuals bear diagnostic characteristics which define them as Neanderthals. Amud I, the skeleton of an adult male was found at the top of layer B1, while the partial skeleton of the baby Amud 7 (Rak, Kimbet & Hovers, 1994) was recovered from the top of layer B2, just under the contact with the base of layer B1. Amud II, represented by a fragment of the right maxilla, was excavated from layer B2."
Central Asian Neanderthals
[edit]Country | Site | Principal Neanderthal finds | MNI | Geological age (ka) | Descriptions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Uzbekistan (Soviet Union) | Teshik-Tash 1 | T-T1: 8-11-yr-old skeleton | 1 | — | Okladnikov (1949) | |
Uzbekistan | Obi-Rakhmat | OR-1: Subadult skull frag. and teeth | 1 | 74[194] | Glantz et al. (2008)[195] | |
Asian Russia | Chagyrskaya cave | Partial mandible | 1 | — | (Announced in Viola 2012) | |
Asian Russia | Okladnik'ov | Sub-adult humerus and femur | 1 | (Announced in Krause et al. 2007)[196] | mtDNA sampled | |
Asian Russia | Denisova Cave | Altai 1: Toe phalanx♀
D11: Bone fragment |
2 | — | Mednikova (2011)
Brown, et al. (2016)[197] |
Altai 1: Full genome sequenced[198]
D11: mtDNA sampled |
Total | 6 |
Dubious attribution or previously attributed to Neanderthals
[edit]Country | Site | Previously attributed to Neanderthals | MNI | Geological age (ka) | Descriptions | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
France | Arcy-sur-Cure (Grotte des Fées) | Mandible | 1 | NA | Parat (1903) | Originally attributed to a Neanderthal (Parat 1903), the mandible was argued more recently to be from a modern human (Leroi-Gourhan 1950, 1958). |
Belgium | Spy | S3: Juvenile tibial shaft | 1 | 5.6 - 5.3[199] | S3: Twiesselman (1953)[200] | Originally described as a Neanderthal, its radiocarbon date is much after the extinction |
Notes
[edit]References
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