Denisova Cave

Denisova Cave
Tourists in front of the Denisova Cave

Coordinates: 51°23′51.29″N 84°40′34.34″E / 51.3975806°N 84.6762056°E / 51.3975806; 84.6762056 Denisova Cave (Денисова пещера, also Ayu-Tash) is a cave in the Bashelaksky Range of the Altai mountains, Siberia, Russia. The cave is of paleoarchaeological and paleontological interest. Bone fragments of the Denisova hominin, sometime called the "X-woman" (referring to the maternal descent of mitochondrial DNA) originate from the cave, including artifacts dated to ~40,000 Before Present (BP). The cave is located in a region thought to be inhabited concurrently in the past by Neanderthals and modern humans.

Contents

Description

Located in Altai Krai, at the border of the Altai Republic, the cave is near the village of Chorny Anui (Чёрный Ануй), and some 150 km south of Barnaul, the next major city.[1] The cave, which is approximately 28 m above the right bank of the Anuy River (a left tributary of the Ob), has formed in upper Silurian limestone and contains a floor area of about 270 sq m. It contains a central chamber with a floor of 9 x 11 m (99 sq m) with side galleries.[2] It has been described as both as a karst cave[1] and as a sandstone cave.[2]

Cave sediments are rich with remnants of animals including extinct ones. Remains of 27 species of large and medium sized mammals have been found, (such as Cave Hyena, Cave Lion etc.) and 39 species of small mammals, as well as remnants of reptiles, 50 bird species and other vertebrates.[3][4] Pollen in the sediments of cave is used for palaeoclimatological research.

History

In the 18th century, the cave was inhabited by a hermit, Dionisij (Denis), and was named after him, while the indigenous Altay people call it Ayu-Tash (Bear Rock).[1] In the 1970s Soviet scientists discovered paleo-archeological remains in the cave which led to further explorations.[1] So far there have been identified twenty-two strata with archeological artifacts that cover the time from Dionisij back to about 125,000 - 180,000 years ago.[2] The timing of the strata was accomplished by the use of thermoluminescence dating of sediments, or, in some cases, radiocarbon dating on charcoal.[2] Among the archeological artifacts are Mousterian and Levallois style tools attributed to Neanderthals.[5] Beside tools researchers found decorative objects of bone, mammoth tusk, animal teeth, ostrich egg shell, fragments of a stone bracelet made of drilled, worked and polished dark green chloritolite, and pendants.[2]

Denisova hominin

Scientists from the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of Novosibirsk have investigated the cave. Among the artifacts which had been left about 30,000 to 48,000 years ago (strata 9 -11), bones were identified. One such bone was a piece of phalanx of a child that was analyzed by Svante Pääbo and coworkers from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig; its mitochondrial DNA revealed a structure that differs from known human patterns and has been ascribed to Denisova hominin, apparently an extinct hominin species.[5] Further analysis revealed that the Denisovans were related to the Neanderthals and interbred with the ancestors of modern Melanesians.[6]

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Denisova hominin — Woman X redirects here. For other uses, see X woman. Denisova hominins (/dɨˈniːsəvə/), or Denisovans, are Paleolithic Era members of the genus Homo that may belong to a previously unknown species. In March 2010, scientists announced the discovery …   Wikipedia

  • Denisova-Mensch — Als Denisova Menschen wird eine Population von Individuen der Gattung Homo bezeichnet, die vor rund 40.000 Jahren im Altai Gebirge im südlichen Sibirien lebte. Belegt ist die Existenz dieser Population nur durch drei Fossilien: durch ein drittes… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Homínido de Denisova —   Hombre de Denisova Rango temporal: Pleistoceno …   Wikipedia Español

  • Hominidé de Denisova — L hominidé de Denisova est le nom donné à une espèce d hominidé identifiée par analyse génétique en mars 2010. Les scientifiques pensent que cette espèce a vécu il y a entre 1 million et 40 000 ans, dans des régions peuplées par l homme de… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Human evolution — This article is about the divergence of Homo sapiens from other species. For a complete timeline of human evolution, see Timeline of human evolution. Reconstruction of Homo heidelbergensis which may be the direct ancestor of both Homo… …   Wikipedia

  • Denissowa-Höhle — Denis Höhle Touristen in der Nähe der Denis Höhle Lage: Region Altai, Russland Geographische Lage …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Multiregional origin of modern humans — A graph detailing the evolution to modern humans using the Multiregional theory of human evolution. The horizontal lines represent multiregional evolution gene flow between regional lineages. In Weidenreich s original graphic (which is more… …   Wikipedia

  • Ausbreitung des Menschen — Frühe Migration der Menschen: Tausende Jahre vor der Gegenwart …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Denisov — (masculine) or Denisova (feminine) is a Russian last name, shared by following people: Andrey Denisov (1952), Russian politician Edison Denisov (1929 1996), Soviet composer Igor Denisov (1984), Russian Footballer Lyubov Denisova Lyudmyla Denisova …   Wikipedia

  • Stammesgeschichte des Menschen — Kladogramm der Familie der Menschenaffen (Hominidae) und ihrer Unterfamilien Ponginae und Homininae sowie den heute noch lebenden Gattungen Pongo (Orang Utans), Gorilla, Pan (Schimpansen) und Homo …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”