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Long-term climate record inferred from early-middle Pleistocene amphibian and squamate reptile assemblages at the Gran Dolina Cave, Atapuerca, Spain
Authors:Blain Hugues-Alexandre  Bailon Salvador  Cuenca-Bescós Gloria  Arsuaga Juan Luis  Bermúdez de Castro José Maria  Carbonell Eudald
Affiliation:a Institut de Paleoecologia Humana i Evolució Social, Àrea de Prehistòria, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Plaça Imperial Tarraco 1, E-43005 Tarragona, Spain
b Laboratoire départemental de Préhistoire du Lazaret, 33bis Boulevard Franck Pilatte, F-06300 Nice, France
c Área de Paleontología, Dpto. Ciencias de la Tierra, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Zaragoza, E-50009 Zaragoza, Spain
d Centro de Investigación (UCM-ISCIII) sobre la Evolución, y Comportamiento Humanos, c/Sinesio Delgado, 4 (Pabellón 14), E-28029 Madrid, Spain
e Dpto. Paleontología, Facultad de Ciencias Geológicas, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Ciudad Universitaria, E-28040 Madrid, Spain
f Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana, Avenida de la Paz 28, E-09004 Burgos, Spain
Abstract:The Gran Dolina cave site is famous for having delivered some of the oldest hominin remains of Western Europe (Homo antecessor, ca. 960 ka). Moreover, the evidence of lithic industries throughout the long vertical section suggests occupation on the part of hominins from the latest early Pleistocene (levels TD3/4, TD5, and TD6) to the late middle Pleistocene (level TD10). The Gran Dolina Sondeo Sur (TDS) has furnished a great number of small-vertebrate remains; among them some 40,000 bones are attributed to amphibians and squamates. Although they do not differ specifically from the extant herpetofauna of the Iberian Peninsula, the overlap of their current distribution areas (= mutual climatic range method) in Spain can provide mean annual temperatures (MAT), the mean temperatures of the coldest (MTC) and warmest (MTW) months, and mean annual precipitation (MAP) estimations for each sub-level, and their change can be studied throughout the sequence. Results from the squamate and amphibian study indicate that during hominin occupation the MAT (10-13 °C) was always slightly warmer than at present in the vicinity of the Gran Dolina Cave, and the MAP (800-1000 mm) was greater than today in the Burgos area. Climatic differences between “glacial” and “interglacial” phases are poorly marked. Summer temperatures (MTW) show stronger oscillations than winter temperatures (MTC), but seasonality remains almost unchanged throughout the sequence. These results are compared with those for large mammals, small mammals, and pollen analysis, giving a scenario for the palaeoclimatic conditions that occurred during the early to middle Pleistocene in Atapuerca, and hence a scenario for the hominins that once lived in the Sierra de Atapuerca.
Keywords:Temperature   Rainfall   Seasonality   Quantitative analysis   Herpetofauna
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