Environmental Change Research Centre, Department of Geography, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK.
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK.
Science. 2023 Aug 11;381(6658):693-699. doi: 10.1126/science.adf4445. Epub 2023 Aug 10.
The oldest known hominin remains in Europe [~1.5 to ~1.1 million years ago (Ma)] have been recovered from Iberia, where paleoenvironmental reconstructions have indicated warm and wet interglacials and mild glacials, supporting the view that once established, hominin populations persisted continuously. We report analyses of marine and terrestrial proxies from a deep-sea core on the Portugese margin that show the presence of pronounced millennial-scale climate variability during a glacial period ~1.154 to ~1.123 Ma, culminating in a terminal stadial cooling comparable to the most extreme events of the last 400,000 years. Climate envelope-model simulations reveal a drastic decrease in early hominin habitat suitability around the Mediterranean during the terminal stadial. We suggest that these extreme conditions led to the depopulation of Europe, perhaps lasting for several successive glacial-interglacial cycles.
在伊比利亚发现了最古老的已知欧洲古人类遗骸[150 万至110 万年前(Ma)],古环境重建表明这里曾有温暖湿润的间冰期和温和的冰期,这支持了古人类一旦定居,就会持续存在的观点。我们报告了对葡萄牙边缘深海岩芯中的海洋和陆地示踪剂的分析,结果表明,在1154 至1123 Ma 期间的冰期存在明显的千年尺度气候变化,最终的冰期盛期降温与过去 40 万年中最极端的事件相当。气候包络模型模拟显示,在冰期盛期,地中海周围的早期古人类栖息地适宜性急剧下降。我们认为,这些极端条件导致了欧洲人口的减少,这种情况可能持续了几个连续的冰期-间冰期循环。