The archaeological site of Atapuerca is located in the
province of Burgos in the north of
Spain and is notable for its evidence of early human occupation. Bone fragments from around 800,000 years ago, found in its Gran Dolina cavern, provide the oldest known evidence of
hominid settlement in
Western Europe and of hominid
cannibalism anywhere in the world.[1]
The archaeological significance of this part of the
province of Burgos became increasingly apparent in the 20th century as the result of the construction of a
metre-gauge railway (now disused) through the
Atapuerca Mountains. Deep
cuttings were made through the
karst geology exposing rocks and sediments of features known as Gran Dolina, Galería Elefante and Sima de los Huesos.
The subsequent excavation of 1964 under the direction of Francisco Jordá Cerdá succeeded with the discovery of anthropogenic artifacts and human fossils from a broad time range (early humans, hunter-gatherer groups,
Bronze Age occupants). Further excavations followed, and interdisciplinary work has been undertaken by several teams, led by
Emiliano Aguirre from 1978 to 1990 and later jointly by
Eudald Carbonell,
José María Bermúdez de Castro and
Juan Luis Arsuaga. These have confirmed the continuous human occupation of the site. In July 2020 two
quartzite stones were discovered, dating to 600,000 years ago,[5] a find which filled in a gap in the evidence for human occupation of the site over a timeline of 1,200,000 years.[6]
In addition, the archaeo-palaeontological records in Sierra de Atapuerca, inside the caves and in the open-air sites, have confirmed a continuous settlement from the Lower Pleistocene (Lower Paleolithic) to the Holocene (Bronze Age), with several species of hominids (Homo antecessor, Homo heidelbergensis, Homo neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens) exploiting the same territory.[2][3][4] According to these authors, the archaeological consequence of the continuous territorial occupation of the same area from 1.3 Ma to the Bronze Age (2100-850 cal. BC) has been the deposition of thousands of lithic and ceramic tools in hundreds of open-air sites[7][8][9]
Protection and access
The site was designated a
UNESCOWorld Heritage Site, under the name, Archaeological Site of Atapuerca.[10][11] The site is also protected at national level (as a Zona Arqueológica, a category of Bien de Interés Cultural on the heritage register) and at regional level (
Castile and León has designated the Sierra de Atapuerca an Espacio cultural).
The regional designation of Espacio cultural is intended to allow
sustainable tourism in the local villages.[12] There is a Site Access Centre (CAYAC) in
Ibeas de Juarros.[13]
There is also an Experimental Archaeology Centre (CAREX) in the village of
Atapuerca. Finds are shown at the
Museum of Human Evolution in the city of
Burgos.
Excavation sites
Portalón de Cueva Mayor (1910 to present)
The combined work of
archaeologists Jesús Carballo (1910 to 1911), Geoffrey Clark (1971), José María Apellániz (1973 to 1983) and the current team of
Juan Luis Arsuaga accounts for the documentation of the excavation sequence of ceramic objects from all relevant sediment layers since the
Neolithic.
Trinchera Galería (1978 to present)
Among numerous
faunal and
floral fossils, a
jaw fragment was found during the 1970s and a skull fragment in 1995, which both belong to Homo heidelbergensis. They date to between 600,000 and 400,000 years BP.
Trinchera Dolina (1981 to present)
The Gran Dolina (also Trinchera Dolina, English: Dolina trench) site is a huge cavern, which has been excavated since September 1981. Its sediments were divided into eleven stratae (TD-1 to TD-11)
Level TD-8, accessible since 1994, contained remarkable
carnivore fossils.
In level TD-7, a
bovine leg in anatomical position was recovered in 1994.
TD-6 (Aurora stratum): From 1994 on, over 160 bone fragments of at least eleven
hominids were found, between 850,000 and 780,000 years old, which makes them at least 250,000 years older than any other hominid yet discovered in
Western Europe. More than 30% of the bones have manipulation marks that suggest
cannibalism.[14] Classification of these remains is still being debated; suggestions range from Homo erectus to Homo heidelbergensis and Homo antecessor. Some researchers, who are familiar with the stratigraphic material of Gran Dolina, argue that Homo antecessor may be the ancestor of Homo heidelbergensis, who in turn gave rise to Homo neanderthalensis. Retouched flake and core stone tools were also found.
The hominid remains show unmistakable signs of having been butchered and consumed in the same way as animals whose bones were also found in this stratum.[1] All bones belonged to young individuals, ranging from infancy to late teenhood.[14] A study of this case considers it an instance of "nutritional" cannibalism, where individuals belonging to hostile or unrelated groups were hunted, killed, and eaten much like animals. Based on the placement and processing of human and animal remains, the authors conclude that cannibalism was likely a "repetitive behavior over time as part of a culinary tradition", not caused by starvation or other exceptional circumstances.[15] They suggest that young individuals (more than half of which were children under ten) were targeted because they "posed a lower risk for hunters" and because this was an effective means for limiting the growth of competing groups.[16]
Level TD-5 is assumed to have been a carnivore den.
In TD-4 (dated to 780,000 BP), four
lithic pieces were found during the 1991 excavation and several remnants of Ursus dolinensis, a sparsely described bear species.
At the lowest levels (TD-1 and TD-2), no fossils were found.
Sima de los Huesos (1983 to present)
Sima de los Huesos (Pit of Bones) accounts for the greatest number of valuable scientific discoveries and knowledge acquired with far-reaching implications. This site is located at the bottom of a 13 m (43 ft) deep shaft, or "chimney", accessible via the narrow corridors of the Cueva Mayor.[17]
Since 1997, the excavators have located more than 5,500 human skeletal remains deposited during the Middle
Pleistocene period, at least 350,000 years old, which represent 28 individuals of Homo heidelbergensis (also classified as early
Neanderthals).[18][19][20][21] Associated finds include Ursus deningeri fossils and a
hand axe called Excalibur. It has received a surprisingly high degree of attention, and a number of experts support the hypothesis that this particular
Acheulean tool made of red
quartzite seems to have served as a ritual offering, most likely for a funeral. The idea sparked a renewal of the disputed evolutionary progress and the stages of human cognitive, intellectual and conceptual development.[22] Ninety percent of the known Homo heidelbergensis fossil record have been obtained at the site. The fossil bone pit includes:
The complete cranium, Skull 5, nicknamed Miguelón, the fragmented cranial remains of Skull 4, nicknamed Agamenón and Skull 6, nicknamed Rui (a reference to the medieval military leader
El Cid).
A complete
pelvis (Pelvis 1), humorously nicknamed Elvis
Mandibles, teeth, a lot of postcranial bones (
femora, hand and foot bones,
vertebrae, ribs, etc.)
Remains of a child with
craniosynostosis were found and dated to 530,000
BP. The find was considered to provide evidence for caring of individuals with disabilities in early human populations.[23]
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from a 400,000 year old
femur has been sequenced, the oldest hominin mtDNA recovered as of 2013. The mtDNA was found to be closer to the mtDNA of
Denisova hominins than to the mtDNA of Neanderthals.[24]
In 2016,
nuclear DNA analysis results determined the Sima hominins to be Neanderthals and not Denisova hominins, and the divergence between Neanderthals and Denisovans predates 430,000 years.[21][19]
In 2019, analysis of Neanderthal teeth found at Sima de los Huesos indicates that modern humans and Neanderthals separated from a common ancestor more than 800,000 years ago.[25]
In 2020, analysis of tooth enamel of hominids found at the sites of Sima del Elefante, Gran Dolina-TD6 and Sima de los Huesos concluded that Atapuerca hominids grew faster than modern humans.[26]
Some excavators have stated that the concentration of bones in the pit allows the suggestion of a traditional
burial culture among the cave's inhabitants. A competing theory cites the lack of small bones in the assemblage and suggests that the fossils were washed into the pit by non-human agents.
Sima del Elefante (1996 to present)
According to José María Bermúdez de Castro, co-director of research at Atapuerca, the Sima del Elefante findings support "anatomical evidence of the hominids that fabricated
tools more than one million years ago", which may have been the earliest among Western European hominids. The first discovery in June 2007 was a tooth,[27] followed by a fragment of a 1.2 million-year-old jawbone (
mandible) and a
proximal phalanx in 2008.[28][29] In July 2022, archaeologists announced the discovery of a 1.4 million-year-old jawbone (
maxilla) included a tooth of a
hominid. The paleoanthropoligist
Eudald Carbonell, who serves as co-director of the excavations at the Archaeological Site of Atapuerca, hypothesizes that the aforementioned jawbone belongs to a specimen of Homo erectus.[30] Other researchers suggest it may have come from Homo antecessor, an early species of human. It located about two meters deeper in the soil than the fossils found in 2008.[31][32]
Cueva del Mirador (1999 to present)
This site provides information on the earliest local farmers and herders of the late
Neolithic and
Bronze Age.
Orchids Valley (2000 to 2001) and Hundidero (2004 to 2005)
Stone tools of the
Upper Paleolithic have been extracted from this locality.
Cueva fantasma (2017 to present)
Homo neanderthalensis craneal fossil (no context) and lithic tools at located here.
Galería de las estatuas (2017 to present)
Mousterian tools, Homo neanderthalensis bones, and DNA remains.
^
abCarbonell, Eudald; Cáceres, Isabel; Lozano, Marina; Saladié, Palmira; Rosell, Jordi; Lorenzo, Carlos; Vallverdú, Josep; Huguet, Rosa; Canals, Antoni; Bermúdez de Castro, José Marı́a (2010). "Cultural Cannibalism as a Paleoeconomic System in the European Lower Pleistocene". Current Anthropology. 51 (4): 543–545.
doi:
10.1086/653807.
JSTOR10.1086/653807.