排序方式: 共有2条查询结果,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1
1.
Barbieri CE Baca SC Lawrence MS Demichelis F Blattner M Theurillat JP White TA Stojanov P Van Allen E Stransky N Nickerson E Chae SS Boysen G Auclair D Onofrio RC Park K Kitabayashi N MacDonald TY Sheikh K Vuong T Guiducci C Cibulskis K Sivachenko A Carter SL Saksena G Voet D Hussain WM Ramos AH Winckler W Redman MC Ardlie K Tewari AK Mosquera JM Rupp N Wild PJ Moch H Morrissey C Nelson PS Kantoff PW Gabriel SB Golub TR Meyerson M Lander ES Getz G Rubin MA Garraway LA 《Nature genetics》2012,44(6):685-689
2.
The first hominin of Europe 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Carbonell E Bermúdez de Castro JM Parés JM Pérez-González A Cuenca-Bescós G Ollé A Mosquera M Huguet R van der Made J Rosas A Sala R Vallverdú J García N Granger DE Martinón-Torres M Rodríguez XP Stock GM Vergès JM Allué E Burjachs F Cáceres I Canals A Benito A Díez C Lozano M Mateos A Navazo M Rodríguez J Rosell J Arsuaga JL 《Nature》2008,452(7186):465-469
The earliest hominin occupation of Europe is one of the most debated topics in palaeoanthropology. However, the purportedly oldest of the Early Pleistocene sites in Eurasia lack precise age control and contain stone tools rather than human fossil remains. Here we report the discovery of a human mandible associated with an assemblage of Mode 1 lithic tools and faunal remains bearing traces of hominin processing, in stratigraphic level TE9 at the site of the Sima del Elefante, Atapuerca, Spain. Level TE9 has been dated to the Early Pleistocene (approximately 1.2-1.1 Myr), based on a combination of palaeomagnetism, cosmogenic nuclides and biostratigraphy. The Sima del Elefante site thus emerges as the oldest, most accurately dated record of human occupation in Europe, to our knowledge. The study of the human mandible suggests that the first settlement of Western Europe could be related to an early demographic expansion out of Africa. The new evidence, with previous findings in other Atapuerca sites (level TD6 from Gran Dolina), also suggests that a speciation event occurred in this extreme area of the Eurasian continent during the Early Pleistocene, initiating the hominin lineage represented by the TE9 and TD6 hominins. 相似文献
1