Everything about Homo Heidelbergensis totally explained
Homo heidelbergensis ("Heidelberg Man") is an
extinct species of the
genus Homo which may be the direct ancestor of
Homo neanderthalensis in
Europe. According to the "
Recent Out of Africa" theory, similar "Archaic
Homo sapiens" found in
Africa (ie.
Homo sapiens idaltu), existing in Africa as a part of the operation of the
Saharan pump, and not the European forms of
Homo heidelbergensis, are thought to be direct ancestors of modern
Homo sapiens.
Homo antecessor is likely a direct ancestor living 750,000 years ago evolving into
Homo heidelbergensis appearing in the fossil record living roughly 600,000 to 250,000 years ago through various areas of Europe.
Homo heidelbergensis remains were found in
Mauer near
Heidelberg,
Germany and then later in
Arago,
France and
Petralona,
Greece. The best evidence found for these hominins date between 400,000 and 500,000 years ago.
H. heidelbergensis stone tool technology was considerably close to that of the
Acheulean tools used by
Homo erectus. The first fossil discovery of this species was made on October 21,
1907 and came from Mauer where the workman Daniel Hartmann spotted a jaw in a sandpit. The jaw was in good condition except for the missing premolar teeth, which were eventually found near the jaw. The workman gave it to professor
Otto Schoetensack from the
University of Heidelberg, who identified and named the fossil.
Most current experts believe
Rhodesian Man, found in Africa, to be within the group
Homo heidelbergensis.
Morphology and interpretations
Both
H. antecessor and
H. heidelbergensis are likely descended from the morphologically very similar
Homo ergaster from Africa. But because
H. heidelbergensis had a larger brain-case — with a typical cranial volume of 1100-1400 cm³ overlapping the 1350 cm³ average of modern humans — and had more advanced tools and behavior, it has been given a separate species classification. The species was tall, 1.8 m (6 ft.) on average, and more muscular than modern humans.
Evidence of hunting
Cut marks found on wild
deer,
elephants,
rhinos and
horses demonstrate that they were butchered, some of the animals weighed as much as 700 kg (1,500 lb) or possibly larger. During this era, now-extinct wild animals such as
mammoths,
European lions and
Irish elk roamed the European continent.
Social behavior
In theory recent findings in
Atapuerca also suggest that
H. heidelbergensis may have been the first species of the
Homo genus to bury their dead, but that's contested at this time. Some experts believe that
H. heidelbergensis, like its descendant
H. neanderthalensis acquired a primitive form of language. No forms of art or sophisticated artifacts other than stone tools have been uncovered, although
red ochre, a mineral that can be used to create a red pigment which is useful as a paint, has been found at Terra Amata excavations in the south of France.
Notable fossils
Boxgrove Man
In 1994
British scientists had unearthed a lower hominin tibia bone just a few
kilometres away from the
English Channel including hundreds of ancient hand axes at the
Boxgrove Quarry site. A partial leg bone is dated to 478,000 and 524,000 years old.
Homo heidelbergensis was the early proto-human species that occupied both
France and
Great Britain at that time; both locales were connected by a landmass during that
epoch. Prior to Gran Dolina, Boxgrove offered the earliest hominid occupants in Europe.
The tibia had been gnawed by a large carnivore, suggesting that he'd been killed by a lion or wolf or that his unburied corpse had been scavenged after death .
Sima de los Huesos
In 1997, a
Spanish team located more than 4,000 human bones dated to an age of at least 350,000 years old in the Sima de los Huesos site in the Sierra de
Atapuerca in northern Spain. The fossil pit bones include a complete cranium and fragments of other craniums, mandibles, teeth, a lot of postcranial bones (
femurs, hand and foot bones,
vertebrae, ribs, etc.) and a complete
pelvis. The pit contains fossils of perhaps 28 individuals together with remains of bears and other carnivores. Nearby sites contain the only known
Homo antecessor fossils.
Further Information
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