Atapuerca

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Atapuerca
Location [[:]], Spain
Date
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UNESCO World Heritage Sites
Name Archaeological Site of Atapuerca
UNESCO State Party Spain
Region Europe and North America
Type Cultural
Criteria iii, v
UNESCO Site ID 989
Year of Listing 2000



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Atapuerca

Atapuerca is a Spanish town in the province of Burgos, Castile-Leon, that gives name to the Sierra de Atapuerca or Sierra Atapuerca, an ancient karstic region of Spain, containing several caves such as the Gran Dolina site, where fossils and stone tools of the earliest known hominids in Europe have been found. It is excavated by a team led jointly by Eudald Carbonell, José María Bermúdez de Castro and Juan Luis Arsuaga.

Early hominids

According to José María Bermúdez de Castro, co-director of research at an archeological site in Atapuerca in June 2007, findings have uncovered "anatomical evidence of the hominids that fabricated tools more than one million years ago": first, a tooth and then a fragment of jawbone, which may be the earliest European hominid.

The excavation of several sites in the late 20th century has found human remains from a wide range of ages ranging from early humans (either Homo erectus, Homo heidelbergensis, or a more recently-identified species called Homo antecessor) to the Bronze Age and the modern man.

The most famous site in Atapuerca is the "Sima de los Huesos" (The pit of bones). This site is located at the bottom of a 13 metre (50 foot) deep chimney reached by scrambling through the cave system of the Cueva Mayor. The fossils there have a minimum age of 350,000 years old, corresponding to the Middle Pleistocene. The "Sima de los huesos" contains abundant human remains representing around 30 skeletons of the species Homo heidelbergensis, a direct ancestor of the Neanderthals.

The excavators suggest that the concentration of bones in the pit may represent the practice of burial by the inhabitants of the cave. A competing theory cites the lack of small bones in the assemblage and suggests that the remains were washed into the pit by natural agencies.

Geography

The Bureba Pass joins the interior of the Iberian peninsula and the way to Europe. It connects the Mediterranean Ebro valley and the Atlantic Duero valley. As such, it was part of the Roman causeway and the Way of Saint James and now of the N-I and AP-1 highways.

History

Atapuerca is also the location of the battle of Atapuerca (1054) between the troops of Ferdinand I of Castile and his brother García V of Navarre.

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ca:Jaciment arqueològic d'Atapuerca

de:Atapuerca es:Sierra de Atapuerca eo:Atapuerca eu:Atapuerca fr:Atapuerca it:Atapuerca ja:アタプエルカ no:Atapuerca pl:Atapuerca pt:Atapuerca fi:Atapuerca

Above content from Wikipedia available under GFDL retrieved Fri, 25 Jul 2008 02:17:15 -0700


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