Direct AMS radiocarbon dates of around 31 ka BP (Wild et al., 2005) for several well preserved crania and other human specimens from Mladeč, Czech Republic, confirm their association with the Aurignacian. This material, which thus represents the earliest modern European remains with archaeological associations, has long featured in discussions of regional continuity or gene flow from Neanderthal into early Cro-Magnon populations. Here, the four most complete Mladeč crania are compared with Neanderthal fossils in metrical characters of the frontofacial region. Both univariate and multivariate analyses show no evidence of Neanderthal affinities, and thus of Neanderthal-derived genes.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Bräuer, G., 1988. Osteometrie. In: Knussmann, R. (Ed.), Anthropologie. G. Fischer 4th Edition. Stuttgart, pp. 160–232.
Bräuer, G. 2001. The “Out-of Africa” Model and the question of regional continuity. In: Tobias, P., Raath, M., Moggi-Cecchi, J., Doyle, G. (Eds.), Humanity from African Naissance to Coming Millennia. Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg, pp. 183–197.
Bräuer, G., 2006. Searching for morphological evidence of Neandertal gene flowin early modern humans. In: Conard, N. J. (Ed.), When Neanderthals and Modern Humans Met. Kerns Verlag, Tübingen, pp. 87–103.
Bräuer, G., Broeg, H., 1998. On the degree of Neandertalmodern continuity in the earliest Upper Palaeolithic crania from the Czech Republic: Evidence from non-metrical features. In: Omoto, K., Tobias, P. (Eds.), The Origins and Past of Modern Humans – Towards Reconciliation. World Scientific, Singapore, pp. 106–125.
Bräuer, G., Rimbach, K., 1990. Late archaic and modern Homo sapiens from Europe, Africa and Southwest Asia: Craniometric comparisons and phylogenetic implications. J. Hum. Evol. 19, 789–807.
Bräuer, G., Stringer, C., 1997. Models, polarization, and perspectives on modern human origins. In: Clark, G., Willermet, C. (Eds.), Conceptual Issues in Modern Human Origins Research. Aldine de Gruyter, New York, pp. 191–201.
Bräuer, G., Collard, M., Stringer, C.B., 2004. On the reliability of recent tests of the Out of Africa Hypothesis for modern human origins. Anat. Rec. 279 A, 701–707.
Caspari, R.E., 1991. The evolution of the posterior cranial vault in the central European Upper Pleistocene. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Churchill, S., Smith, F., 2000. Makers of the early Aurignacian of Europe. Yrbk. Phys. Anthropol. 43, 61–115.
Collard, M., Franchino, N., 2002. Pairwise difference analysis in modern human origins research. J. Hum. Evol. 43, 323–352.
Darroch, J., Mosiman, J., 1985. Canonical and principal components of shape. Biometrika 72, 241–252.
Delson, E., Tattersall, I., van Couvering, J., Brooks, A., 2000. Encyclopedia of Human Evolution and Prehistory. 2nd Edition. Garland, NewYork.
Frayer, D., 1986. Cranial variation at Mladec? and the relationship between Mousterian and Upper Paleolithic hominids. Anthropos (Brno) 23, 243–256.
Frayer, D., 1992. Evolution at the European edge: Neanderthal and Upper Paleolithic relationships. Préhistoire Européenne 2, 9–69.
Frayer, D., Wolpoff, M., Thorne, A., Smith, F., Pope, G., 1993. Theories of modern human origins: the paleontological test. Am. Anthropol.95, 14–50.
Gibbons, A., 2001. Modern men trace ancestry to African migrants. Science 292, 1051–1052.
Harvati, K., 2003. The Neanderthal taxonomic position: models of intra-and inter-specific craniofacial variation. J. Hum. Evol. 44, 107–132.
Heim, J.-L., 1976. Les hommes fossiles de La Ferrassie. Archives l’Institute de Paléontologie Humaine, Mémoires 35.
Howells, W.W., 1973. Cranial Variation in Man. Peabody Museum Papers 67.
Howells, W.W., 1975. Neanderthal Man: facts and figures. In: Tuttle, R. (Ed.), Paleoanthropology. Mouton, The Hague, pp. 389–407.
Jelínek, J., 1978. Earliest Homo sapiens sapiens from Central Europe (Mladec?, Czechoslovakia). Paper at Xth International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Delhi, India.
Pettitt, P., Trinkaus, E., 2000. Direct radiocarbon dating of the Brno 2 Gravettian human remains. Anthropologie (Brno) 38, 149–150.
Sergi S., 1974. Il cranio Neandertaliano del Monte Circeo. Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Rome.
Simmons, T., Falsetti, A., Smith, F., 1991. Frontal bone morphometrics of southwest Asian Pleistocene hominids. J. Hum. Evol. 20, 249–270.
Smith, F.H., Jankovic, I., Karavanic, I., 2005. The assimilation model and Neandertal-early modern human interactions in Europe. Quat.Intern. 137, 7–19.
Stringer, C., 1989. The origin of early modern humans: a comparison of the European and non- European evidence. In: Mellars, P., Stringer, C. (Eds.), The Human Revolution: Behavioural and Biological Perspectives on the Origins of Modern Humans. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, pp. 232–244.
Stringer, C.B., 2002a. New perspectives on the Neanderthals. Evol. Anthropol., Suppl. 1, 58–59.
Stringer, C.B., 2002b. Modern human origins: progress and prospects. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. (B) 357, 563–579.
Stringer, C., Gamble C., 1993. In Search of the Neanderthals. Thames and Hudson, London.
Stringer, C., Trinkaus, E., 1981. The Shanidar Neandertal crania. In: Stringer, C. (Ed.), Aspects of Human Evolution. Taylor and Francis, London, pp. 129–165.
Suzuki, H., Takai, F., 1970. The Amud Man and his Cave Site. Academic Press of Japan, Tokyo.
Svoboda, J., Van der Plicht, J., Kuelka, V., 2002. Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic human fossils from Moravia and Bohemia (Czech Republic): some new 14C dates. Antiquity 76, 957–962.
Tattersall, I., 2003. The Monkey in the Mirror: Essays on the Science of What Makes Us Human. Harcourt Brace, New York.
Tattersall, I., Schwartz, J.H., 1999. Hominids and hybrids: the place of Neandertals in human evolution. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 7117–7119.
Trinkaus, E., 1983. The Shanidar Neandertals. Academic Press, New York.
Trinkaus, E., 1987. The Neandertal face: evolutionary and functional perspectives on a recent hominid face. J. Hum. Evol. 16, 429–443.
Trinkaus, E., 2005. Early modern humans. Ann. Rev. Anthropol. 34, 207–230.
Trinkaus, E., Moldovan, O., Milota, S., Bilgar, A., Sarcina, L., Athreya, S., Bailey, S. E., Rodrigo, R., Mircea, G., Higham, T., Bronk Ramsey, C., Van der Plicht, J., 2003. An early modern human from the Peştera cu Oase, Romania. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 11231–11236.
Trinkaus, E., Zilhão, J., Rougier, H., Rodrigo, R., Milota, Ş., Gherase, M., Sarcina, L., Moldovan, O., Băltean, I., Codrea, V., Bailey, S.E., Franciscus, R.G. Ponce de León, M., Zollikofer, C.P.E., 2006. The Peştera cu Oase and early modern humans in southeastern Europe. In: Conard, N. J. (Ed.), When Neanderthals and Modern Humans Met. Kerns Verlag, Tübingen, pp. 145–164.
Vandermeersch, B. 1981. Les Hommes de Qafzeh (Israel). CNRS, Paris.
Vlček, E., 1995. Evolution of human populations in the European Pleistocene. In: Ullrich, H. (Ed.), Man and Environment in the Palaeolithic. Etudes et Recherches Archéologique de l’Université de Liège 62, pp. 167–179.
Wild, E. M., Teschler-Nicola, M., Kutschera, W., Steier, P., Trinkaus, E., Wanek, W., 2005. Direct dating of Early Upper Palaeolithic human remains from Mladec?. Nature 435, 332–335.
Wolpoff, M., Hawks, J. Frayer, D., Hunley, K., 2001. Modern human ancestry at the peripheries: a test of the replacement theory. Science 291, 293–297.
Zilhão, J., Trinkaus, E., 2002. Portrait of the artist as a child: The Gravettian human skeleton from the Abrigo do Lagar Velho and its archaeological context. Trabalhos de Arqueologia 22, Lisboa.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2006 Springer
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Bräuer, G., Broeg, H., Stringer, C.B. (2006). Earliest Upper Paleolithic crania from Mladeč, Czech Republic, and the question of Neanderthal-modern continuity: metrical evidence from the fronto-facial region. In: Hublin, JJ., Harvati, K., Harrison, T. (eds) Neanderthals Revisited: New Approaches and Perspectives. Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5121-0_15
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5121-0_15
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-5120-3
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-5121-0
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)