» Articles » PMID: 15457258

New Evidence on the Earliest Human Presence at High Northern Latitudes in Northeast Asia

Overview
Journal Nature
Specialty Science
Date 2004 Oct 1
PMID 15457258
Citations 20
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The timing of early human dispersal to Asia is a central issue in the study of human evolution. Excavations in predominantly lacustrine sediments at Majuangou, Nihewan basin, north China, uncovered four layers of indisputable hominin stone tools. Here we report magnetostratigraphic results that constrain the age of the four artefact layers to an interval of nearly 340,000 yr between the Olduvai subchron and the Cobb Mountain event. The lowest layer, about 1.66 million years old (Myr), provides the oldest record of stone-tool processing of animal tissues in east Asia. The highest layer, at about 1.32 Myr, correlates with the stone tool layer at Xiaochangliang, previously considered the oldest archaeological site in this region. The findings at Majuangou indicate that the oldest known human presence in northeast Asia at 40 degrees N is only slightly younger than that in western Asia. This result implies that a long yet rapid migration from Africa, possibly initiated during a phase of warm climate, enabled early human populations to inhabit northern latitudes of east Asia over a prolonged period.

Citing Articles

A computational approach to selective attention in embodied approaches to cognitive archaeology.

Constant A, Di Paolo L, Guenin-Carlut A, M Martinez L, Criado-Boado F, Mueller J J R Soc Interface. 2024; 21(219):20240508.

PMID: 39378981 PMC: 11461058. DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2024.0508.


Hominin population bottleneck coincided with migration from Africa during the Early Pleistocene ice age transition.

Muttoni G, Kent D Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024; 121(13):e2318903121.

PMID: 38466876 PMC: 10990135. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2318903121.


Earliest Prepared core technology in Eurasia from Nihewan (China): Implications for early human abilities and dispersals in East Asia.

Ma D, Pei S, Xie F, Ye Z, Wang F, Xu J Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024; 121(11):e2313123121.

PMID: 38437546 PMC: 10945746. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2313123121.


Technological innovations at the onset of the Mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition in high-latitude East Asia.

Yang S, Wang F, Xie F, Yue J, Deng C, Zhu R Natl Sci Rev. 2021; 8(1):nwaa053.

PMID: 34691547 PMC: 8288396. DOI: 10.1093/nsr/nwaa053.


Hypercarnivorous teeth and healed injuries to from Early Pleistocene Nihewan beds, China, support social hunting for ancestral wolves.

Tong H, Chen X, Zhang B, Rothschild B, White S, Balisi M PeerJ. 2020; 8:e9858.

PMID: 33194358 PMC: 7485486. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.9858.