Bailey Shara E, Hublin Jean-Jacques
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Department of Human Evolution, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig, Germany.
J Hum Evol. 2006 May;50(5):485-508. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.11.008. Epub 2006 Feb 17.
Human remains associated with the earliest Upper Paleolithic industries are sparse. What is preserved is often fragmentary, making it difficult to accurately assign them to a particular species. For some time it has been generally accepted that Neandertals were responsible for the Châtelperronian and anatomically modern humans for the early Aurignacian industries. However, the recent re-dating of several of the more-complete modern human fossils associated with the early Aurignacian (e.g., Vogelherd) has led some to question the identity of the makers and the context of these early Upper Paleolithic industries. The Grotte du Renne at Arcy-sur-Cure, France has yielded many hominin remains, from Mousterian, Châtelperronian, Aurignacian, and Gravettian layers. Previously, a child's temporal bone from the Châtelperronian Layer Xb was recognized as belonging to a Neandertal; however, most of the teeth from Châtelperronian layers VIII-X remain unpublished. We describe the dental remains from the Châtelperronian layers, place them in a comparative (Mousterian Neandertal and Upper Paleolithic modern human) context, and evaluate their taxonomic status. The teeth (n = 29) represent a minimum of six individuals aged from birth to adult. The permanent dental sample (n = 15) from the Châtelperronian layers of Arcy-sur-Cure exhibits traits (e.g., lower molar mid-trigonid crest) that occur more frequently in Neandertals than in Upper Paleolithic modern humans. Furthermore, several teeth show trait combinations, including Cusp 6/mid-trigonid crest/anterior fovea in the lower second molar, that are rare or absent in Upper Paleolithic modern humans. The deciduous teeth (n = 14) significantly increase the sample of known deciduous hominin teeth and are more similar to Mousterian Neandertals from Europe and Asia than to Upper Paleolithic modern humans. Thus, the preponderance of dental evidence from the Grotte du Renne strongly supports that Neandertals were responsible for the Châtelperronian industry at Arcy-sur-Cure.
与最早的旧石器时代晚期工业相关的人类遗骸非常稀少。保存下来的往往支离破碎,难以准确将它们归为某一特定物种。一段时间以来,人们普遍认为尼安德特人创造了夏特尔佩罗文化,而解剖学意义上的现代人类创造了早期奥瑞纳文化。然而,最近对一些与早期奥瑞纳文化相关的更完整的现代人类化石(如沃格尔赫德化石)重新测定年代后,一些人开始质疑这些早期旧石器时代晚期工业的创造者身份和背景。法国叙尔河畔阿尔西的雷讷洞穴出土了许多人类遗骸,来自莫斯特文化、夏特尔佩罗文化、奥瑞纳文化和格拉维特文化层。此前,夏特尔佩罗文化层Xb的一块儿童颞骨被认定属于尼安德特人;然而,夏特尔佩罗文化层VIII - X的大部分牙齿仍未发表。我们描述了夏特尔佩罗文化层的牙齿遗骸,将它们置于一个比较性的(莫斯特文化的尼安德特人和旧石器时代晚期的现代人类)背景中,并评估它们的分类地位。这些牙齿(共29颗)至少代表了6个从婴儿到成人的个体。来自叙尔河畔阿尔西夏特尔佩罗文化层的恒牙样本(共15颗)呈现出一些特征(如下颌磨牙三角座中嵴),这些特征在尼安德特人中比在旧石器时代晚期的现代人类中更常见。此外,几颗牙齿呈现出一些特征组合,如下颌第二磨牙的6尖/三角座中嵴/前凹,这些特征在旧石器时代晚期的现代人类中很少见或不存在。乳牙(共14颗)显著增加了已知的人类乳牙样本,并且与欧洲和亚洲莫斯特文化的尼安德特人比与旧石器时代晚期的现代人类更为相似。因此,来自雷讷洞穴的大量牙齿证据有力地支持了尼安德特人是叙尔河畔阿尔西夏特尔佩罗文化的创造者这一观点。