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Fossil human remains from Bolomor Cave (Valencia, Spain) / Juan Luis Arsuaga, Josep Fernández Peris, Ana Gracia-Téllez, Rolf Quam, José Miguel Carretero, Virginia Barciela González, Ruth Blasco, Felipe Cuartero, Pablo Sañudo.

Contributor(s): Arsuaga, Juan Luis, 1954-.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookCitation: Arsuaga, J.L., Fernández Peris, J., Gracia-Téllez, A., Quam, R., Carretero, J.M.., Barciela González, V., Blasco, R., Cuartero, F., Sañudo, P., 2012. Fossil human remains from Bolomor Cave (Valencia, Spain). Journal of Human Evolution 1-11 Publisher: [S.l.]: Elsevier, 2012Content type: texto (visual) Media type: electrónico Genre/Form: Artículo científicoSummary: Systematic excavations carried out since 1989 at Bolomor Cave have led to the recovery of four Pleistocene human fossil remains, consisting of a fibular fragment, two isolated teeth, and a nearly complete adult parietal bone. All of these specimens date to the late Middle and early Late Pleistocene (MIS 7-5e). The fibular fragment shows thick cortical bone, an archaic feature found in non-modern (i.e. non-Homo sapiens) members of the genus Homo. Among the dental remains, the lack of a midtrigonid crest in the M1 represents a departure from the morphology reported for the majority of Neandertal specimens, while the large dimensions and pronounced shoveling of the marginal ridges in the C1 are similar to other European Middle and late Pleistocene fossils. The parietal bone is very thick, with dimensions that generally fall above Neandertal fossils and resemble more closely the Middle Pleistocene Atapuerca (SH) adult specimens. Based on the presence of archaic features, all the fossils from Bolomor are attributed to the Neandertal evolutionary lineage.
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Systematic excavations carried out since 1989 at Bolomor Cave have led to the recovery of four Pleistocene human fossil remains, consisting of a fibular fragment, two isolated teeth, and a nearly complete adult parietal bone. All of these specimens date to the late Middle and early Late Pleistocene (MIS 7-5e).
The fibular fragment shows thick cortical bone, an archaic feature found in non-modern (i.e. non-Homo sapiens) members of the genus Homo. Among the dental remains, the lack of a midtrigonid crest in the M1 represents a departure from the morphology reported for the majority of Neandertal specimens,
while the large dimensions and pronounced shoveling of the marginal ridges in the C1 are similar to other European Middle and late Pleistocene fossils. The parietal bone is very thick, with dimensions that generally fall above Neandertal fossils and resemble more closely the Middle Pleistocene Atapuerca (SH)
adult specimens. Based on the presence of archaic features, all the fossils from Bolomor are attributed to the Neandertal evolutionary lineage.

Arsuaga, J.L., Fernández Peris, J., Gracia-Téllez, A., Quam, R., Carretero, J.M.., Barciela González, V., Blasco, R., Cuartero, F., Sañudo, P., 2012. Fossil human remains from Bolomor Cave (Valencia, Spain). Journal of Human Evolution 1-11

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