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Late survival of Neanderthals at the southernmost extreme of Europe
Authors:Finlayson Clive  Pacheco Francisco Giles  Rodríguez-Vidal Joaquín  Fa Darren A  Gutierrez López José María  Santiago Pérez Antonio  Finlayson Geraldine  Allue Ethel  Baena Preysler Javier  Cáceres Isabel  Carrión José S  Fernández Jalvo Yolanda  Gleed-Owen Christopher P  Jimenez Espejo Francisco J  López Pilar  López Sáez José Antonio  Riquelme Cantal José Antonio  Sánchez Marco Antonio  Guzman Francisco Giles  Brown Kimberly  Fuentes Noemí  Valarino Claire A  Villalpando Antonio  Stringer Christopher B  Martinez Ruiz Francisca  Sakamoto Tatsuhiko
Institution:The Gibraltar Museum, 18-20 Bomb House Lane, Gibraltar. jcfinlay@gibraltar.gi
Abstract:The late survival of archaic hominin populations and their long contemporaneity with modern humans is now clear for southeast Asia. In Europe the extinction of the Neanderthals, firmly associated with Mousterian technology, has received much attention, and evidence of their survival after 35 kyr bp has recently been put in doubt. Here we present data, based on a high-resolution record of human occupation from Gorham's Cave, Gibraltar, that establish the survival of a population of Neanderthals to 28 kyr bp. These Neanderthals survived in the southernmost point of Europe, within a particular physiographic context, and are the last currently recorded anywhere. Our results show that the Neanderthals survived in isolated refuges well after the arrival of modern humans in Europe.
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