Jean-Baptiste Lambard , Alison Pereira , Pierre Voinchet , Hervé Guillou , Marian C. Reyes , Sébastien Nomade , Xavier Gallet , Maricar Belarmino , Jean-Jacques Bahain , John De Vos , Christophe Falguères , Andrea Cosalan , Thomas Ingicco
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Paleolithic site of Kalinga, in the Cagayan River Basin (Luzon Island), has recorded the oldest known traces of human occupation of the Philippine archipelago dated at 709 ± 68 ka. The island of Luzon is further known for its endemic Hominin Homo luzonensis (Callao cave) recently dated at 134 ± 14 ka, which makes it the oldest human remains in the Philippines.
The present study provides new chronological data on the Kalinga site and surrounding localities on the left bank of the Cagayan Valley and tackles the question over the geochronology of the human settlement of the basin. Following the discovery of some abundant paleontological remains and lithic artefacts on surface, several excavations took place since the 1970s. In 2014, new research in the area by our team on a site named Kalinga led to the recovery of hundreds of undisturbed archaeological remains (lithic tools and butchery marks). Apart from the early Middle Pleistocene ages obtained for the Kalinga site, the geochronology of the area is still largely unknown. Through the use of ESR on bleached quartz and 40Ar/39Ar single crystal laser fusion on plagioclase dating methods, the chronology of four archaeological sequences has been here constrained for the first time. Our results highlight a human occupation presence between 796 ± 70 ka and 273 ± 20 ka reducing the chronological gap between Kalinga site and Callao Cave, placing the Cagayan basin as a cornerstone to better understand the human arrival in insular Asia.
期刊介绍:
Quaternary Geochronology is an international journal devoted to the publication of the highest-quality, peer-reviewed articles on all aspects of dating methods applicable to the Quaternary Period - the last 2.6 million years of Earth history. Reliable ages are fundamental to place changes in climates, landscapes, flora and fauna - including the evolution and ecological impact of humans - in their correct temporal sequence, and to understand the tempo and mode of geological and biological processes.