1999
DOI: 10.1007/bf02436193
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Molar tooth fragment BL5-0: the oldest human remain found in the Plio-Pleistocene of Orce (Granada province, Spain)

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Cited by 21 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…In the case of BL, a small tooth fragment that preserves the mesial part of the crown and root (BL-0) has been reported as an upper human molar (Gibert et al, 1999b). However, there are reservations on the stratigraphic position of the fossil and even on its attribution to the genus Homo: in fact, it has been suggested that it could belong to a deciduous tooth fragment of H. antiquus, a species better represented in the faunal assemblage of this site, as the bunodont teeth of hippos show a thick enamel layer that matches the anatomy of BL-0 (Arribas and Palmqvist, 2002).…”
Section: On the Presence Of Early Pleistocene Human Remains In Southementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the case of BL, a small tooth fragment that preserves the mesial part of the crown and root (BL-0) has been reported as an upper human molar (Gibert et al, 1999b). However, there are reservations on the stratigraphic position of the fossil and even on its attribution to the genus Homo: in fact, it has been suggested that it could belong to a deciduous tooth fragment of H. antiquus, a species better represented in the faunal assemblage of this site, as the bunodont teeth of hippos show a thick enamel layer that matches the anatomy of BL-0 (Arribas and Palmqvist, 2002).…”
Section: On the Presence Of Early Pleistocene Human Remains In Southementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This site, alongside the nearby locality of Fuente Nueva 3, presents evidence of hominin behaviour, including the earliest lithic assemblages documented in the Iberian Peninsula (Turq et al, 1996;Gibert et al, 1998;Barsky et al, 2010Barsky et al, , 2015Titton et al, 2019Titton et al, , 2020Titton et al, , 2021Toro-Moyano et al, 2009, 2010aYravedra et al, 2021). Barranco León has also produced hominin remains, specifically a mandibular left dm1 (Toro Moyano et al, 2013, although see also Gibert et al, 1999;Ribot et al, 2015). Bone modifications by biotic agents, including hominins, have also been documented at the site Espigares et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…1.2 -1.1 Ma (Bermúdez de Carbonell et al 2008;de Lombera-Hermida et al 2015;Huguet et al 2017;Parés et al 2006;Rosas et al 2006), and at the eastern Andalusian sites of Barranco León-5, where tooth fragments assigned to Homo sp. were found, and Fuente Nueva-3, which dated from 1.4 -1.2 Ma (Álvarez et al, 2015;Barsky et al, 2015;Carbonell and Rodríguez, 2006;de Lumley et al, 2009;Duval et al, 2012a,b;Fajardo 2009;Gibert, J. et al, 1998;1999a,b, 2001Martínez-Navarro et al, 1997;Oms et al, 2000;Ribot et al, 2015;Toro-Moyano et al, 2003, 2011. Different conjectures have been put forward about how often Early Pleistocene Homo was present in western Europe, about possibly available routes of access from Africa, and about what were the corresponding technological behaviours (Bar-Yosef and Belfer Cohen, 2001;Carrión and Walker, 2019;Galliotti and Mussi, 2018;Gibert, L. et al, 2016;Gonen, 2006: Goren-Inbar et al, 2000;Hovers and Braun, 2009;Ollé et al, 2016;Sharon and Barsky, 2016;Shea, 2013Shea, , 2016Vallverdú et al, 2014;Walker, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%