Street Martin, Terberger Thomas, Orschiedt Jörg
Forschungsbereich Altsteinzeit des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums, Schloss Monrepos, D-56567 Neuwied, Germany.
J Hum Evol. 2006 Dec;51(6):551-79. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2006.04.014. Epub 2006 Jul 25.
We review the hominin fossil record from western Central Europe in light of the recent major revisions of the geochronological context. The mandible from Mauer (Homo heidelbergensis), dated to circa 500,000 years ago, continues to represent the earliest German hominin and may coincide with the occupation of Europe north of the high alpine mountain chains. Only limited new evidence is available for the Middle Pleistocene, mostly in the form of skull fragments, a pattern that may relate to taphonomic processes. These finds and their ages suggest the gradual evolution of a suite of Neandertal features during this period. Despite new finds of classic Neandertals, there is no clear proof for Neandertal burial from Germany. Alternatively, cut marks on a skull fragment from the Neandertal type site suggest special treatment of that individual. New Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates of previous finds leave little reliably dated evidence for anatomically modern humans (AMH) in Europe before 30,000 BP; the remains from Hahnöfersand, Binshof-Speyer, Paderborn-Sande, and Vogelherd are now of Holocene age. Thus, a correlation of AMH with the Aurignacian remains to be proven, and the general idea of a long coexistence of Neandertals and AMH in Europe may be questioned. In western Central Europe, evidence of Gravettian human fossils is also very limited, although a new double grave from lower Austria may be relevant. The only dated burial from the German Upper Paleolithic (from Mittlere Klause) falls into a time period (circa 18,600 BP) represented by only a few occupation sites in western Central Europe. A number of human remains at Magdalenian sites appear to result from variable (secondary) burial practices. In contrast, the Final Paleolithic (circa 12,000-9600 cal. BC) yields an increase of hominin finds, including multiple burials (Bonn-Oberkassel, Neuwied-Irlich), similar to the situation in western and southern Europe.
鉴于近期地质年代学背景的重大修订,我们重新审视了中欧西部的古人类化石记录。来自毛尔(海德堡人)的下颌骨,年代约为50万年前,仍然是德国最早的古人类,可能与阿尔卑斯山脉以北欧洲地区的人类居住时间相吻合。关于中更新世的新证据有限,大多是头骨碎片的形式,这种情况可能与埋藏学过程有关。这些发现及其年代表明,这一时期一系列尼安德特人特征在逐渐演变。尽管发现了新的典型尼安德特人化石,但德国并没有尼安德特人墓葬的确凿证据。另外,来自尼安德特人模式产地的一块头骨碎片上有切割痕迹,表明对该个体进行了特殊处理。先前发现的新的加速器质谱(AMS)放射性碳年代测定结果显示,在距今30,000 BP之前,欧洲几乎没有可靠年代测定的解剖学意义上的现代人(AMH)证据;来自哈诺费尔桑德、宾绍夫-施派尔、帕德博恩-桑德和福格尔海德的遗骸现在属于全新世时期。因此,AMH与奥瑞纳文化的关联还有待证实,尼安德特人和AMH在欧洲长期共存的普遍观点可能受到质疑。在中欧西部,格拉维特文化人类化石的证据也非常有限,不过奥地利下奥地利州的一座新双人墓可能与之相关。德国旧石器时代晚期(来自米特勒克劳泽)唯一有年代测定的墓葬属于一个时间段(约18,600 BP),而中欧西部这个时期的居住遗址很少。马格德林文化遗址的一些人类遗骸似乎是不同的(二次)埋葬方式造成的。相比之下,旧石器时代晚期(约公元前12,000 - 9600年)发现的古人类化石有所增加,包括多座墓葬(波恩-奥伯卡塞尔、诺伊维德-伊尔利希),这与西欧和南欧的情况类似。