Normal view MARC view ISBD view

The human remains from Axlor (Dima, Biscay, northern Iberian Peninsula) / Asier Gómez‐Olivencia, Diego López‐Onaindia, Nohemi Sala Antoine Balzeau, Ana Pantoja‐Pérez, Ignacio Arganda‐Carreras, Mikel Arlegi, Joseba Rios‐Garaizar, Aida Gómez‐Robles.

Contributor(s): Gómez Olivencia, Asier, 1979- | López Onaindía, Diego | Sala, Nohemi | Balzeau, Antoine | Pantoja Pérez, Ana | Arganda Carreras, Ignacio | Arlegi, Mikel | Rios Garaizar, Joseba, 1976- | Gómez Robles, Aida | Aranzadi Zientzia Elkartea.
Material type: materialTypeLabelComputer fileCitation: Gómez-Olivencia, a., López-Onaindia, D., Sala, N., Balzeau, A., Pantoja-Pérez, A., Arganda-Carreras, I., Arlegi, M., Rios-Garaizar, J., Gómez-Robles, A., 2020. The human remains from Axlor (Dima, Biscay, northern Iberian Peninsula). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 172, 475-491. Publisher: [S.l.]: John Wiley & Sons, 2020Content type: texto (visual) Media type: electrónico Genre/Form: Artículo científicoOnline resources: Click here to access online Summary: Objectives: We provide the description and comparative analysis of all the human fossil remains found at Axlor during the excavations carried out by J. M. de Barandiarán from 1967 to 1974: a cranial vault fragment and seven teeth, five of which likely belonged to the same individual, although two are currently lost. Our goal is to describe in detail all these human remains and discuss both their taxonomic attribution and their stratigraphic context. Materials and methods: We describe external and internal anatomy, and use classic and geometric morphometrics. The teeth from Axlor are compared to Neandertals, Upper Paleolithic, and recent modern humans. Results: Two teeth (a left dm2, a left di1) and the parietal fragment show morphological features consistent with a Neandertal classification, and were found in an undisturbed Mousterian context. The remaining three teeth (plus the two lost ones), initially classified as Neandertals, show morphological features and a general size that are more compatible with their classification as modern humans. Discussion: A left parietal fragment (Level VIII) from a single probably adult Neandertal individual was recovered during the old excavations performed by Barandiarán. Additionally, two different Neandertal children lost deciduous teeth during the formations of levels V (left di1) and IV (right dm2). In addition, a modern human individual is represented by five remains (two currently lost) from a complex stratigraphic setting. Some of the morphological features of these remains suggest that they may represent one of the scarce examples of Upper Paleolithic modern human remains in the northern Iberian Peninsula, which should be confirmed by direct dating.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Item type Current location Call number URL Status Date due
Publicación Publicación Publicaciones
Arq. Prehistórica
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ajpa.23989 Not for loan

Restringido

Objectives:
We provide the description and comparative analysis of all the human fossil remains found at Axlor during the excavations carried out by J. M. de Barandiarán from 1967 to 1974: a cranial vault fragment and seven teeth, five of which likely belonged to the same individual, although two are currently lost. Our goal is to describe in detail all these human remains and discuss both their taxonomic attribution and their stratigraphic context.
Materials and methods:
We describe external and internal anatomy, and use classic and geometric morphometrics. The teeth from Axlor are compared to Neandertals, Upper Paleolithic, and recent modern humans.
Results:
Two teeth (a left dm2, a left di1) and the parietal fragment show morphological features consistent with a Neandertal classification, and were found in an undisturbed Mousterian context. The remaining three teeth (plus the two lost ones), initially classified as Neandertals, show morphological features and a general size that are more compatible with their classification as modern humans.
Discussion:
A left parietal fragment (Level VIII) from a single probably adult Neandertal individual was recovered during the old excavations performed by Barandiarán. Additionally, two different Neandertal children lost deciduous teeth during the formations of levels V (left di1) and IV (right dm2). In addition, a modern human individual is represented by five remains (two currently lost) from a complex stratigraphic setting. Some of the morphological features of these remains suggest that they may represent one of the scarce examples of Upper Paleolithic modern human remains in the northern Iberian Peninsula, which should be confirmed by direct dating.

Gómez-Olivencia, a., López-Onaindia, D., Sala, N., Balzeau, A., Pantoja-Pérez, A., Arganda-Carreras, I., Arlegi, M., Rios-Garaizar, J., Gómez-Robles, A., 2020. The human remains from Axlor (Dima, Biscay, northern Iberian Peninsula). American Journal of Physical Anthropology 172, 475-491.

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.
© 2017 - Aranzadi Zientzia Elkartea