Earliest Evidence of Homo Sapiens in Eastern Asia

Fragments of ancient rock and bone in Eastern Asia are changing our understanding of the history of human migration.

They’re artifacts found in the Shiyu site of northeastern China, and new analysis has revealed that they were created by Homo sapiens some 45,000 years ago.

It’s the earliest evidence of modern humans in Eastern Asia, suggesting that Homo sapiens were established at Shiyu by then, and provoking a new interpretation of the cultural artifacts previously found at the site.

“The site reflects a process of cultural creolization – the contact between societies and relocated peoples – blending inherited traits with novel innovations, thus complicating the traditional understanding of Homo sapiens‘ global expansion,” explains archaeologist Francesco D’Errico of the University of Bordeaux.

Some of the stone tools from Shiyu, knapped using the Levallois method. (Yang et al., Nat. Ecol. Evol., 2024)

Shiyu has been known for decades as a place of archaeological significance. It was inhabited for a long time – the sedimentary sequence is 30 meters (98 feet) deep, and the layers therein were deposited over tens of thousands of years. Buried in the sediment, archaeologists have found a rich assortment of tools and artifacts made and used by the people who lived there.

Establishing who those people were, and how long they lived there, has been an ongoing project. The first excavations, in 1963, yielded thousands of objects: 15,000 stone artifacts, thousands of pieces of bone and teeth… and one single hominid fossil, a piece of skull bone identified as belonging to Homo sapiens.

However, most of the collection was subsequently lost, including the skull fragment.

Undeterred, scientists undertook another excavation in 2013. Led by paleoanthropologist Shi-Xia Yang of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, an international multidisciplinary team has now worked to characterize the site in detail.

Some of the tools recovered at the site, including scrapers, blades, a borer, and an awl. (Yang et al., Nat. Ecol. Evol., 2024)

They selected a large number of the available artifacts, and analyzed them closely. They studied animal bones found at the site. And they performed new dating analysis, using radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence techniques to accurately date samples taken from different sections of the sediment sequence.

The dating revealed that the very oldest layer of the sequence was deposited around 45,000 years ago. And the analysis of the artifacts revealed a range of technological skills, such as the Levallois technique for knapping stone, developed in Europe around 250,000 years ago.

The assemblage also includes tanged and hafted projectile points with evidence of impact fractures, suggesting hunting skill. And there was obsidian that could only have been sourced from a large distance, at least 800 to 1,000 kilometers (500 to 620 miles), away, suggesting trade or travel or both.

Tanged stone tools showing evidence of notched retouching (red) and thinning of the tang (green). (Yang et al., Nat. Ecol. Evol., 2024)

Other interesting items include a worked bone tool, and a disk of graphite with a hole in its center, the purpose of which remains unclear (although the latter, the researchers speculate, could have been a large button of some kind).

The animal bones at the site were also fascinating. Most of them were equid, or horse bones, mostly adults. Many of them showed cut marks indicative of butchering, suggesting that the inhabitants of the Shiyu site were skilled hunters who preyed on horses.

It paints a complex and inspiring picture. “The amalgamation of diverse cultural traits signifies a complex and innovative adaptation by our ancestors during their expansion,” Yang says.

The mysterious graphite disk (left) and bone tool (right). (Yang et al., Nat. Ecol. Evol., 2024)

Combined with the still-lost fragment of skull, the discovery represents an important piece of human history, the researchers say. Perhaps future work could uncover more clues about the mysterious people who once inhabited Shiyu, leaving behind traces of their cunning and resourcefulness, to be uncovered by their descendents, tens of thousands of years later.

“Understanding the complexities of our ancient past can offer invaluable insights into the diverse pathways taken by our ancestors and the richness of human adaptation,” says archaeologist Michael Petraglia of Griffith University in Australia.

“This discovery at Shiyu unveils a captivating story of early human migration and cultural fusion, expanding our knowledge of our ancient origins and the remarkable adaptability of Homo sapiens.”

The research has been published in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

Source: Science Alert

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Comments (1)

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    Jerry Krause

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    Hi PSI Readers,

    “the sedimentary sequence is 30 meters (98 feet) deep, and the layers therein were deposited over tens of thousands of years.” The fundamental assumption “the layers therein were deposited over tens of thousands of years” Uniformly by year after year???? There were no droughts and wind storms in those earlier times???

    I was born and grow up within 5 miles of a lake with the name “Clear Lake”. However it was not a clear lake. It had been clear in the late 1800s but during the dirty 1930s it acquired a mud bottom. Now it is again a clear lake because during a winter, or maybe two, the muddy water was vacuumed out and the muddy water deposited some distance from its shore on a gently slooping, GRASSY pasture. Which dried grassy held the small particles of the mud from flowing back into the lake as the clear water flowed back into the lake.

    The important fact of this article is no assumptions are identified as such. When Einstein reasoned his imagined system that led to E = m C^2 he clearly stated he was assumeing that the speed of light was constant.

    Have a good day

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