Английская Википедия:Barranco León
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox ancient site
Barranco León is an archaeological site in Orce, Andalusia, Spain with an age range between 1.2 and 1.4 million of years.[1] It is noted for having yielded evidence of hominin occupation, including the milk tooth of a boy or girl of 10 years. After the tooth had been dated, its original owner (the "child of Orce") was hailed as having left the earliest anatomical evidence for humans in Western Europe.[2][3]
The site was excavated in 1995 by Josep Gibert i Clols and between 1999 and 2000 by Martínez Fernández y Toro.
Animals
Now situated in an arid area of Spain, the site was once at the edge of a lake. Among the large mammals were found Hippopotamus antiquus, Equus altidens, Felidae cf. Homotherium sp., Megaloceros sp. and Bovini gen. et indet.[4]
Humans
Apart from the tooth, other finds from Orce have been posited as early human remains, but their status has not been confirmed.
Stone Tools
The lithic industry assemblage found at the site is from the Oldowan,[4] and consists of more than 1000 artefacts (including waste flakes). Spiral or helical fractures, impact points, flake scars, and bone flakes were discovered on megafaunal remains and are associated with the tools.[2]
See also
The Instituto Geológico y Minero de España in collaboration with the Spanish Geological Society (Sociedad Geológica de España) has drawn up a list of internationally important geosites in Spain. These geosites are known in Spain as LIGs. Barraco Leon is listed as AND331,[5] a separate reference from the global geosite one, VP016. The listing is primarily for the site's paleontological interest with regard to vertebrates ("Yacimientos de vertebrados del Plioceno y Pleistoceno españoles"), although the stratigraphy is also of interest. It is noted that the exact location of the site is confidential.[5]
The geosite is one of 72 included in the Granada Geopark. The Geopark was included in the European Geoparks Network in 2020.[6] The Geopark has promoted Orce in the context of geotourism as being on a trekking route, the "First Settlers Great Path", which starts and finishes at Huéscar.[7]
References
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- Prehistoric sites in Spain
- Pleistocene paleontological sites of Europe
- Archaeological sites in Andalusia
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