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Dive into the research topics where Charles M. FitzGerald is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles M. FitzGerald.


Nature | 2011

The earliest evidence for anatomically modern humans in northwestern Europe

Thomas Higham; Tim Compton; Chris Stringer; Roger Jacobi; Beth Shapiro; Erik Trinkaus; Barry Chandler; Flora Gröning; Chris Collins; Simon Hillson; Paul O’Higgins; Charles M. FitzGerald; Michael J. Fagan

The earliest anatomically modern humans in Europe are thought to have appeared around 43,000–42,000 calendar years before present (43–42 kyr cal bp), by association with Aurignacian sites and lithic assemblages assumed to have been made by modern humans rather than by Neanderthals. However, the actual physical evidence for modern humans is extremely rare, and direct dates reach no farther back than about 41–39 kyr cal bp, leaving a gap. Here we show, using stratigraphic, chronological and archaeological data, that a fragment of human maxilla from the Kent’s Cavern site, UK, dates to the earlier period. The maxilla (KC4), which was excavated in 1927, was initially diagnosed as Upper Palaeolithic modern human. In 1989, it was directly radiocarbon dated by accelerator mass spectrometry to 36.4–34.7 kyr cal bp. Using a Bayesian analysis of new ultrafiltered bone collagen dates in an ordered stratigraphic sequence at the site, we show that this date is a considerable underestimate. Instead, KC4 dates to 44.2–41.5 kyr cal bp. This makes it older than any other equivalently dated modern human specimen and directly contemporary with the latest European Neanderthals, thus making its taxonomic attribution crucial. We also show that in 13 dental traits KC4 possesses modern human rather than Neanderthal characteristics; three other traits show Neanderthal affinities and a further seven are ambiguous. KC4 therefore represents the oldest known anatomically modern human fossil in northwestern Europe, fills a key gap between the earliest dated Aurignacian remains and the earliest human skeletal remains, and demonstrates the wide and rapid dispersal of early modern humans across Europe more than 40 kyr ago.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2005

Alternative dental measurements: proposals and relationships with other measurements.

Simon Hillson; Charles M. FitzGerald; Hm Flinn


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2007

Sexual Dimorphism of the Dental Tissues in Human Permanent Mandibular Canines and Third Premolars

Shelley R. Saunders; Andrea H.W. Chan; Bonnie Kahlon; Hagen F. Kluge; Charles M. FitzGerald


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2006

Health of infants in an imperial roman skeletal sample : Perspective from dental microstructure

Charles M. FitzGerald; Shelley R. Saunders; Luca Bondioli; Roberto Macchiarelli


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2005

Test of histological methods of determining chronology of accentuated striae in deciduous teeth

Charles M. FitzGerald; Shelley R. Saunders


Archive | 2007

Reading Between the Lines: Dental Development and Subadult Age Assessment Using the Microstructural Growth Markers of Teeth

Charles M. FitzGerald; Jerome C. Rose


In: Koppe, T and Meyer, G and Alt, KW and Brook, A and Dean, MC and Kjaer, I and Lukacs, JR and Smith, BH and Teaford, MF, (eds.) Comparative Dental Morphology. (pp. 178-183). S Karger Pub (2009) | 2009

Deciduous tooth growth in an ancient Greek infant cemetery

Charles M. FitzGerald; Simon Hillson


AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY p. 102. (2005) | 2008

Technique and Application in Dental Anthropology: Dental reduction in Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene hominids: alternative approaches to assessing tooth size

Charles M. FitzGerald; Simon Hillson


In: (Proceedings) 78th Annual Meeting of the American-Association-of-Physical-Anthropologists. (pp. p. 128). WILEY-LISS (2009) | 2009

Resolving the mystery of the Kylindra cemetery: deciduous tooth development in ancient Greece.

Charles M. FitzGerald; Simon Hillson


Archive | 2018

INCREMENTAL STRUCTURES IN TEETH: KEYS TO UNLOCKING AND UNDERSTANDING DENTAL GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT

Daniel Antoine; Charles M. FitzGerald; Jerome C. Rose

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Simon Hillson

University College London

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Hm Flinn

University College London

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