Fuente: Natural History  Museum news
  Expuesto el: viernes, 03 de agosto de 2012 16:10
  Autor: Natural History Museum news
  Asunto: Invisible volcanic ash gives clues to Neanderthal demise
| Invisible to    the human eye, cryptotephra is a fine volcanic glass that is blasted out of    erupting volcanoes along with ash. It leaves behind a hidden layer, in the    earth, which has now been detected, giving clues about why the Neanderthals    died out. About 40,000 years ago, a    layer of cryptotephra particles carpeted a huge area of Central and Eastern    Europe after a massive    volcanic eruption in Italy called the Campanian Ignimbrite    (CI). 
 Skull of a Neanderthal, Homo neanderthalensis This eruption, and the    resulting environmental and climatic disruption, has been suggested as a    factor in the extinction    of the Neanderthals. Interaction with us, modern humans, is    one of the other possibilities. Neanderthals, who were our    closest relatives, had been living in Europe for hundreds of thousands of    years. But all physical evidence of them disappears after about 30,000 years    ago.  Early modern humans were    known to have arrived in Europe at least 35,000 years ago, having originated    in Africa, but precise dates, and the length of time they overlapped with the    last Neanderthals, are unclear. Archaeological sites,    many in caves, have revealed stone tools belonging to Neanderthals and to    early modern humans. Scientists have now used    a new technique to    detect CI cryptotephra in some of these sites across Europe    and in Libya - the lighter particles of the glass means it spreads over much    wider distances than ash. The team of more than 40    scientists, including Prof    Chris Stringer and Mark Lewis of the Natural History Museum,    published their research in the Proceedings of the National Academy of    Sciences last week. They found that the CI cryptotephra lies above, and so    is younger than, the layers where modern human stone tools    began to replace Neanderthal stone tools, in 4 central European sites. This means that the    Italian eruption    happened after the Neanderthals had already declined and so    it couldn't have been the cause of their extinction. The team says that the CI    volcanic eruption, and severe climatic cooling that happened around the same    time, did not have a lasting impact on Neanderthals, or early modern humans. Modern humans had already    arrived in Europe by 40,000 years ago, and posed a greater threat than natural disasters    to the survival of other humans living there, they say. The issue may have been    increased competition for resources, with modern humans being better able to    take advantage of their surroundings. Or possibly conflict - genetic studies    suggest there was certainly close contact between Neanderthals and early    modern humans who left Africa, including some interbreeding.   Either way, it is looking    more and more likely that modern humans were implicated in the demise of the    Neanderthals. Share this
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