Abstract

The Guadix-Baza Basin (GBB) in Andalucía, Spain, comprises palaeontological and archaeological sites dating from the Early Pliocene to the Middle Pleistocene, including some of the earliest sites with evidence for the presence of early humans (Homo sp.) in Europe. Thus, the history of climate and environments in this basin contributes significantly to our understanding of the conditions under which early humans spread into Europe during the Early Pleistocene. Here we present estimates of precipitation and primary productivity in the GBB from the Pliocene to the Middle Pleistocene based on dental ecometrics in fossil communities of large herbivorous mammals, and perform an ecometrics-based distribution modelling to analyse the environmental conditions of Early and Middle Pleistocene human sites in Europe. Our results show that Early Pleistocene humans generally occupied on average relatively diverse habitats with ecotones, such as woodlands and savannas, but avoided very open and harsh (cool or dry) environments. During the Middle Pleistocene in Europe, humans occupied a comparatively much broader range of environments than during the Early Pleistocene, but were on average more concentrated in environments where the dental ecometric of mammals indicate wooded palaeoenvironments. In the earliest human occupation sites of the GBB, Barranco León and Fuente Nueva 3, the mean annual precipitation and net primary production estimates indicate climatic conditions close to modern Mediterranean sclerophyllous woodland environments, but with slightly higher primary productivity, indicating some similarity with East African woodlands. On the other hand, the environments did not resemble African grassland savannas. The browse-dominated diets of ungulates from Barranco León and Fuente Nueva 3 further suggest palaeoenvironments where grasses were a minor component of the vegetation. In the slightly older site of Venta Micena that has no evidence for the presence of hominins, dental ecometric estimates indicate climate and environments similar to Mediterranean “forest steppe” environments existing in the surroundings of Baza today. Grasses were prevalent in the diet of some taxa, especially equids, in Venta Micena, but most of the species show browse-dominated diets even there.

Highlights

  • Understanding the environmental conditions under which early humans dispersed into Iberia during the Early and Middle Pleistocene is a key issue for understanding what enabled them to expand and how they interacted within different environments

  • Mean annual precipitation (MAP) and net primary production (NPP) estimates based on dental ecometrics in large herbivorous mammal communities indicate a drastic decline from ca. 870 to ca. 450 mm/a in mean annual precipitation (MAP) and from ca. 1130 to ca. 700 g(C)/m2/a in NPP from the Early Pliocene of Baza 1 to the Plio-Pleistocene boundary of Huelago in the Guadix-Baza Basin (GBB) (Table 1, Fig. 2)

  • The MAP in the GBB today is around 450 mm (ca. 470 mm in Guadix, ca. 430 mm in Baza), which is similar to the estimated value for Fuente Nueva 1 and Venta Micena, while the rest of the Pleistocene localities in the GBB are estimated to have higher mean annual precipitation values

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the environmental conditions under which early humans dispersed into Iberia during the Early and Middle Pleistocene is a key issue for understanding what enabled them to expand and how they interacted within different environments. It has been suggested that the earliest human expansion out of Africa into Southern and Eastern Asia occurred in grassland, wooded grassland and woodland habitats similar to modern African savannas (Dennell and Roebroeks, 2005; Dennell, 2010). This “savannahstan-hypothesis” sensu stricto is not consistently supported by multi-proxy analyses of environmental conditions in the Early Pleistocene human occupation sites in Eurasia. Mesowear analysis of the ungulate fauna in ‘Ubeidiya further supports a wooded palaeoenvironment, being dominated by ungulates with browsing diets (Belmaker and O'Brien, 2018)

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