Articles producció científica> Història i Història de l'Art

The first direct ESR analysis of a hominin tooth from Atapuerca Gran Dolina TD-6 (Spain) supports the antiquity of Homo antecessor

  • Identification data

    Identifier: imarina:4683792
    Authors:
    Duval M., Grün R., Parés J., Martín-Francés L., Campaña I., Rosell J., Shao Q., Arsuaga J., Carbonell E., Bermúdez de Castro J.
    Abstract:
    The present study reports the results of the first direct Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) dating study of Homo antecessor, the oldest known hominin species identified in Western Europe. The analysis of a tooth (ATD6-92) from TD6 unit of Atapuerca Gran Dolina (Spain) following a ¿semi non-destructive¿ procedure provides a final age estimate ranging from 624 to 949 ka, which covers all possible uranium uptake scenarios. Last, the additional magnetostratigraphic data collected within TD6 enables to further constrain the initial ESR chronology and to propose an age of between 772 and 949 ka for Homo antecessor, in agreement with previous dating works. Although our new results do not refine the existing chronology of TD6 unit, they nevertheless support the antiquity of H. antecessor, which pre-dates the estimated divergence age of modern and archaic human lineages based on genetic evidence. This work illustrates the challenges of dating human teeth by means of the ESR method, with the main pitfalls that are sometimes inherent to this specific application (e.g., systematic μCT-scanning of fossil hominin teeth; limited knowledge about the original sedimentary environment for teeth coming from old excavations; heterogeneous spatial distribution of the U-series elements in dental tissues). We identified several sources of uncertainty that may directly impact the accuracy of the age result. In particular, a slight contamination of dentine (<6%) in the enamel fragment measured by ESR was found to induce a significant age underestimation (33%) if not taken into consideration. It indeed caused not only a DE underestimation (by about 8%), but also produced a massive internal dose rate overestimation (by a factor of about 3.5). In contrast, other sources of uncertainty, such as the hete
  • Others:

    Author, as appears in the article.: Duval M., Grün R., Parés J., Martín-Francés L., Campaña I., Rosell J., Shao Q., Arsuaga J., Carbonell E., Bermúdez de Castro J.
    Department: Història i Història de l'Art Història i Història de l'Art
    URV's Author/s: Carbonell Roura, Eudald / Rosell Ardévol, Jordi
    Keywords: Sierra de atapuerca Pleistocè inferior Datacions
    Abstract: The present study reports the results of the first direct Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) dating study of Homo antecessor, the oldest known hominin species identified in Western Europe. The analysis of a tooth (ATD6-92) from TD6 unit of Atapuerca Gran Dolina (Spain) following a ¿semi non-destructive¿ procedure provides a final age estimate ranging from 624 to 949 ka, which covers all possible uranium uptake scenarios. Last, the additional magnetostratigraphic data collected within TD6 enables to further constrain the initial ESR chronology and to propose an age of between 772 and 949 ka for Homo antecessor, in agreement with previous dating works. Although our new results do not refine the existing chronology of TD6 unit, they nevertheless support the antiquity of H. antecessor, which pre-dates the estimated divergence age of modern and archaic human lineages based on genetic evidence. This work illustrates the challenges of dating human teeth by means of the ESR method, with the main pitfalls that are sometimes inherent to this specific application (e.g., systematic μCT-scanning of fossil hominin teeth; limited knowledge about the original sedimentary environment for teeth coming from old excavations; heterogeneous spatial distribution of the U-series elements in dental tissues). We identified several sources of uncertainty that may directly impact the accuracy of the age result. In particular, a slight contamination of dentine (<6%) in the enamel fragment measured by ESR was found to induce a significant age underestimation (33%) if not taken into consideration. It indeed caused not only a DE underestimation (by about 8%), but also produced a massive internal dose rate overestimation (by a factor of about 3.5). In contrast, other sources of uncertainty, such as the heterogeneity of the sedimentary environment, the variability of the water content over time, the previous μCT-scanning of the tooth or the potential preferential creation of unstable NOCORs in the ESR signal, showed here a limited impact on the final age result. Given our current understanding of the ESR method and the existing uncertainties associated with the evaluation of the DE and dose rate, this is probably as far as we can presently go in the dating study of ATD6-92 sample.
    Thematic Areas: Stratigraphy Geosciences, multidisciplinary Geology Geography, physical Geociências Geochemistry & geophysics Earth and planetary sciences (miscellaneous) Ciências ambientais Ciências agrárias i Biodiversidade Astronomia / física Antropologia / arqueologia
    ISSN: 18711014
    Author's mail: jordi.rosell@urv.cat eudald.carbonell@urv.cat
    Author identifier: 0000-0002-6758-6291 0000-0001-6306-3621
    Record's date: 2024-09-07
    Papper version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
    Link to the original source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1871101417301383
    Licence document URL: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
    Papper original source: Quaternary Geochronology. 47 120-137
    APA: Duval M., Grün R., Parés J., Martín-Francés L., Campaña I., Rosell J., Shao Q., Arsuaga J., Carbonell E., Bermúdez de Castro J. (2018). The first direct ESR analysis of a hominin tooth from Atapuerca Gran Dolina TD-6 (Spain) supports the antiquity of Homo antecessor. Quaternary Geochronology, 47(), 120-137. DOI: 10.1016/j.quageo.2018.05.001
    Article's DOI: 10.1016/j.quageo.2018.05.001
    Entity: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    Journal publication year: 2018
    Publication Type: Journal Publications
  • Keywords:

    Earth and Planetary Sciences (Miscellaneous),Geochemistry & Geophysics,Geography, Physical,Geology,Geosciences, Multidisciplinary,Stratigraphy
    Sierra de atapuerca
    Pleistocè inferior
    Datacions
    Stratigraphy
    Geosciences, multidisciplinary
    Geology
    Geography, physical
    Geociências
    Geochemistry & geophysics
    Earth and planetary sciences (miscellaneous)
    Ciências ambientais
    Ciências agrárias i
    Biodiversidade
    Astronomia / física
    Antropologia / arqueologia
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