New magnetostratigraphic evidence for the age of Acheulean tools at the archaeo-palaeontological site “Solana del Zamborino” (Guadix – Baza Basin, S Spain)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2017-10-18Referencia bibliográfica
Álvarez-Posada, C., Parés, J.M., Sala, R. et al. New magnetostratigraphic evidence for the age of Acheulean tools at the archaeo-palaeontological site “Solana del Zamborino” (Guadix – Baza Basin, S Spain). Sci Rep 7, 13495 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-14024-5
Patrocinador
Research grant B090678SV18BC (General Direction of Cultural Heritage, Junta de Andalucía); Research grant CGL2010–16821 andCGL2014–62296-EXP (MINECO); Research grant CGL20013–43013R (MINECO-FEDER); Research Group RNM 369 of the Junta de AndalucíaResumen
The sedimentary record in the Guadix-Baza Basin (southern Spain) has proved to be a great source
of information for the Miocene through the Pleistocene periods, due to the abundant faunal remains
preserved, in some cases associated with lithic tools. The Solana del Zamborino (SZ) section has been
the subject of controversy ever since a magnetostratigraphic analysis resulted in an age of 750–770 Kyr
for Acheulean tools, a chronology significantly older than the ~600 Kyr established chronology for the
first Acheulean record in Europe. Although recent findings at the “Barranc de la Boella” site (northeast
of the Iberian Peninsula) seem to indicate that an earlier introduction of such technique in Europe
around 0.96–0.781 Ma is possible, the precise age of the classical site at SZ is still controversial. The aim
of this paper is to constrain the chronology of the site by developing a longer magnetostratigraphic
record. For this purpose, we carried out an exhaustive sampling in a new succession at SZ. Our results
provide a ~65 m magnetostratigraphic record in which 4 magnetozones of normal polarity are found.
Our new magnetostratigraphic data suggest an age range between 300–480 Kyr for the lithic tools,
closer to the age of traditional Acheulean sites in Europe.