Messinian age & savannah environment of the possible hominin Graecopithecus from Europe

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Madelaine Böhme - (Author)
  • Nikolai Spassov - (Author)
  • Martin Ebner - (Author)
  • Denis Geraads - (Author)
  • Latinka Hristova - (Author)
  • Uwe Kirscher - (Author)
  • Sabine Kötter - (Author)
  • Ulf Linnemann - , Senckenberg Natural Historical Collections Dresden (Author)
  • Jérôme Prieto - (Author)
  • Socrates Roussiakis - (Author)
  • George Theodorou - (Author)
  • Gregor Uhlig - , Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research Dresden (Author)
  • Michael Winklhofer - (Author)

Abstract

Dating fossil hominids and reconstructing their environments is critically important for understanding human evolution. Here we date the potentially oldest hominin, Graecopithecus freybergi from Europe and constrain the environmental conditions under which it thrived. For the Graecopithecus-bearing Pikermi Formation of Attica/Greece, a saline aeolian dust deposit of North African (Sahara) provenance, we obtain an age of 7.37-7.11 Ma, which is coeval with a dramatic cooling in the Mediterranean region at the Tortonian-Messinian transition. Palaeobotanic proxies demonstrate C4-grass dominated wooded grassland-To-woodland habitats of a savannah biome for the Pikermi Formation. Faunal turnover at the Tortonian-Messinian transition led to the spread of new mammalian taxa along with Graecopithecus into Europe. The type mandible of G. freybergi from Pyrgos (7.175 Ma) and the single tooth (7.24 Ma) from Azmaka (Bulgaria) represent the first hominids of Messinian age from continental Europe. Our results suggest that major splits in the hominid family occurred outside Africa.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0177347
JournalPloS one
Volume12
Issue number5
Publication statusPublished - May 2017
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

PubMed 28531204