• Anthropologists map Neanderthals' path across Europe and Eurasia

    From Primum Sapenti@invalide@invalid.invalid to sci.anthropology.paleo on Sun Jun 15 23:18:00 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo


    https://phys.org/news/2025-06-anthropologists-neanderthals-roads-europe-eurasia.html

    Recent scholarship has concluded that Neanderthals
    made a second major migration from Eastern Europe
    to Central and Eastern Eurasia between 120,000 and
    60,000 years ago. But the routes they took have
    long been a mysteryrCoprimarily because there are
    few archaeological sites connecting the two regions.

    In a new analysis, a team of anthropologistsrCousing
    computer simulationsrCohas offered a map of possible
    pathways, which concludes that Neanderthals likely
    used river valleys as natural highways and traveled
    during warmer periods to move approximately 2,000
    miles (3,250 km) in less than 2,000 years.

    "Our findings show that despite obstacles like
    mountains and large rivers, Neanderthals could have
    crossed northern Eurasia surprisingly quickly,"
    explains Emily Coco, who began the study as a New
    York University doctoral student and is now a
    postdoctoral researcher at Portugal's University
    of Algarve.
    ...


    https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0325693

    Agent-based simulations reveal the possibility
    of multiple rapid northern routes for the second
    Neanderthal dispersal from Western to Eastern
    Eurasia


    Abstract
    Genetic and archaeological evidence imply a second
    major movement of Neanderthals from Western to
    Central and Eastern Eurasia sometime in the Late
    Pleistocene. The genetic data suggest a date of
    120reA80 ka for the dispersal and the archaeological
    record provides an earliest date of arrival in the
    Altai by ca. 60 ka. Because the number of
    archaeological sites linking the two regions is
    very small, the exact route taken and its timing
    have been the matter of considerable debate. In
    particular, climate change in this period modified
    landscapes considerably, changing the cost of
    moving in different directions. Here, we apply
    agent-based least-cost path simulations for the
    first time to Neanderthals, showing that they most
    likely took a northern route through the Urals and
    southern Siberia under all climate scenarios.
    Agents leaving either the southern or the northern
    Caucasus Mountains reach the Altai in less than
    2000 years during two time windows when the climate
    was mild, in MIS 5e (the Last Interglacial) and in
    MIS 3. The latter coincides with the dated presence
    of Neanderthals at Chagyrskaya and Okladnikov Caves
    in the Altai. The results of this modeling approach
    demonstrate a remarkable east-west geographic
    connectivity of northern Eurasia via river
    corridors despite the presumed barriers of the Ural
    Mountains and major north-south flowing rivers. Our
    results highlight the unique strengths of agent-based
    simulations to reconstruct pathways for ancient
    migrations.
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