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Dive into the research topics where Isabel Cáceres is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabel Cáceres.


Nature | 2008

The first hominin of Europe

Eudald Carbonell; José María Bermúdez de Castro; J.M. Parés; Alfredo Pérez-González; Gloria Cuenca-Bescós; Andreu Ollé; Marina Mosquera; Rosa Huguet; Jan van der Made; Antonio Rosas; Robert Sala; Josep Vallverdú; Nuria García; Darryl E. Granger; María Martinón-Torres; Xosé Pedro Rodríguez; Greg M. Stock; Josep Maria Vergès; Ethel Allué; Francesc Burjachs; Isabel Cáceres; Antoni Canals; Alfonso Benito; Carlos Díez; Marina Lozano; Ana Mateos; Marta Navazo; Jesús Rodríguez; Jordi Rosell; Juan Luis Arsuaga

The earliest hominin occupation of Europe is one of the most debated topics in palaeoanthropology. However, the purportedly oldest of the Early Pleistocene sites in Eurasia lack precise age control and contain stone tools rather than human fossil remains. Here we report the discovery of a human mandible associated with an assemblage of Mode 1 lithic tools and faunal remains bearing traces of hominin processing, in stratigraphic level TE9 at the site of the Sima del Elefante, Atapuerca, Spain. Level TE9 has been dated to the Early Pleistocene (approximately 1.2–1.1 Myr), based on a combination of palaeomagnetism, cosmogenic nuclides and biostratigraphy. The Sima del Elefante site thus emerges as the oldest, most accurately dated record of human occupation in Europe, to our knowledge. The study of the human mandible suggests that the first settlement of Western Europe could be related to an early demographic expansion out of Africa. The new evidence, with previous findings in other Atapuerca sites (level TD6 from Gran Dolina), also suggests that a speciation event occurred in this extreme area of the Eurasian continent during the Early Pleistocene, initiating the hominin lineage represented by the TE9 and TD6 hominins.


Nature | 2006

Late survival of Neanderthals at the southernmost extreme of Europe

Clive Finlayson; Francisco Giles Pacheco; Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal; Darren A. Fa; José María Gutiérrez López; Antonio Santiago Pérez; Geraldine Finlayson; Ethel Allué; Javier Baena Preysler; Isabel Cáceres; José S. Carrión; Yolanda Fernández Jalvo; Christopher P. Gleed-Owen; Francisco José Jiménez Espejo; Pilar López; José A. Sáez; José Antonio Riquelme Cantal; Antonio Sánchez Marco; Francisco Giles Guzmán; Kimberly Brown; Noemí Fuentes; Claire Valarino; Antonio Villalpando; Chris Stringer; Francisca Martínez Ruiz; Tatsuhiko Sakamoto

The late survival of archaic hominin populations and their long contemporaneity with modern humans is now clear for southeast Asia. In Europe the extinction of the Neanderthals, firmly associated with Mousterian technology, has received much attention, and evidence of their survival after 35 kyr bp has recently been put in doubt. Here we present data, based on a high-resolution record of human occupation from Gorham’s Cave, Gibraltar, that establish the survival of a population of Neanderthals to 28 kyr bp. These Neanderthals survived in the southernmost point of Europe, within a particular physiographic context, and are the last currently recorded anywhere. Our results show that the Neanderthals survived in isolated refuges well after the arrival of modern humans in Europe.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Neanderthal exploitation of marine mammals in Gibraltar

Chris Stringer; J. C. Finlayson; R.N.E. Barton; Y. Fernández-Jalvo; Isabel Cáceres; Richard Sabin; Edward J. Rhodes; A. P. Currant; Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal; Francisco Giles-Pacheco; José Antonio Riquelme-Cantal

Two coastal sites in Gibraltar, Vanguard and Gorhams Caves, located at Governors Beach on the eastern side of the Rock, are especially relevant to the study of Neanderthals. Vanguard Cave provides evidence of marine food supply (mollusks, seal, dolphin, and fish). Further evidence of marine mammal remains was also found in the occupation levels at Gorhams Cave associated with Upper Paleolithic and Mousterian technologies [Finlayson C, et al. (2006) Nature 443:850–853]. The stratigraphic sequence of Gibraltar sites allows us to compare behaviors and subsistence strategies of Neanderthals during the Middle Paleolithic observed at Vanguard and Gorhams Cave sites. This evidence suggests that such use of marine resources was not a rare behavior and represents focused visits to the coast and estuaries.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

A new Lower Pleistocene archeological site in Europe (Vallparadís, Barcelona, Spain)

Kenneth Martínez; Joan Garcia; Eudald Carbonell; Jordi Agustí; Jean-Jaques Bahain; Hugues-Alexandre Blain; Francesc Burjachs; Isabel Cáceres; Mathieu Duval; Christophe Falguères; Manuel Hoyos Gómez; Rosa Huguet

Here we report the discovery of a new late Lower Pleistocene site named Vallparadís (Barcelona, Spain) that produced a rich archeological and paleontological sequence dated from the upper boundary of the Jaramillo subchron to the early Middle Pleistocene. This deposit contained a main archeological layer with numerous artifacts and a rich macromammalian assemblage, some of which bore cut marks, that could indicate that hominins had access to carcasses. Paleomagnetic analysis, electron spin resonance-uranium series (ESR-US), and the biostratigraphic chronological position of the macro- and micromammal and lithic assemblages of this layer reinforce the proposal that hominins inhabited Europe during the Lower Pleistocene. The archeological sequence provides key information on the successful adaptation of European hominins that preceded the well-known fossil population from Atapuerca and succeeded the finds from Orce basin. Hence, this discovery enables us to close a major chronological gap in the early prehistory of Iberia. According to the information in this paper and the available data from these other sites, we propose that Mediterranean Western Europe was repeatedly and perhaps continuously occupied during the late Matuyama chron.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Age and Date for Early Arrival of the Acheulian in Europe (Barranc de la Boella, la Canonja, Spain)

Josep Vallverdú; Palmira Saladié; Antonio Rosas; Rosa Huguet; Isabel Cáceres; Marina Mosquera; Antonio García-Tabernero; Iván Lozano-Fernández; Antonio Pineda-Alcalá; Ángel Carrancho; Juan J. Villalaín; Didier L. Bourles; Régis Braucher; Anne Lebatard; Jaume Vilalta; Montserrat Esteban-Nadal; Maria Bennàsar; Marcus Bastir; Lucía López-Polín; Andreu Ollé; Josep Maria Vergès; Sergio Ros-Montoya; Bienvenido Martínez-Navarro; Ana Maria Garcia; Jordi Martinell; Isabel Expósito; Francesc Burjachs; Jordi Agustí; Eudald Carbonell

The first arrivals of hominin populations into Eurasia during the Early Pleistocene are currently considered to have occurred as short and poorly dated biological dispersions. Questions as to the tempo and mode of these early prehistoric settlements have given rise to debates concerning the taxonomic significance of the lithic assemblages, as trace fossils, and the geographical distribution of the technological traditions found in the Lower Palaeolithic record. Here, we report on the Barranc de la Boella site which has yielded a lithic assemblage dating to ∼1 million years ago that includes large cutting tools (LCT). We argue that distinct technological traditions coexisted in the Iberian archaeological repertoires of the late Early Pleistocene age in a similar way to the earliest sub-Saharan African artefact assemblages. These differences between stone tool assemblages may be attributed to the different chronologies of hominin dispersal events. The archaeological record of Barranc de la Boella completes the geographical distribution of LCT assemblages across southern Eurasia during the EMPT (Early-Middle Pleistocene Transition, circa 942 to 641 kyr). Up to now, chronology of the earliest European LCT assemblages is based on the abundant Palaeolithic record found in terrace river sequences which have been dated to the end of the EMPT and later. However, the findings at Barranc de la Boella suggest that early LCT lithic assemblages appeared in the SW of Europe during earlier hominin dispersal episodes before the definitive colonization of temperate Eurasia took place.


Current Anthropology | 2010

Sleeping Activity Area within the Site Structure of Archaic Human Groups: Evidence from Abric Romaní Level N Combustion Activity Areas

Josep Vallverdú; Manuel Vaquero; Isabel Cáceres; Ethel Allué; Jordi Rosell; Palmira Saladié; Gema Chacón; Andreu Ollé; Antoni Canals; Robert Sala; Marie-Agnès Courty; Eudald Carbonell

The identification of different prehistoric activity areas and Neanderthal behavior is one of the main research goals at the Abric Romaní site, which is a well‐preserved and microstratified Mousterian archaeological site. A conspicuous occupation surface excavated in level N yielded a remarkably preserved set of aligned combustion activity areas in the inner zone of the living surface. This set of combustion activity areas suggests analogy with sleeping‐and‐resting activity areas of modern foragers. Multidisciplinary analyses suggest (1) diachronic occupation and (2) similar use of the inner zone of the living floor. The sleeping area comprises five combustion activity areas, spaced at approximately 1 m distance from each other. A large wood imprint of travertine was found near the inner zone, suggesting an architectural remain of a prehistoric dwelling. Descriptions of archaic human sleeping activity areas are very few in Paleolithic archaeology. This identification is a proxy for estimating the number of individuals of Mousterian groups that occupied the Abric Romaní rock shelter around 55 kyr BP.


Current Anthropology | 2010

Cultural cannibalism as a Paleoeconomic system in the European Lower Pleistocene: the case of level TD6 of Gran Dolina (Sierra de Atapuerca, Burgos, Spain)

Eudald Carbonell; Isabel Cáceres; Marina Lozano; Palmira Saladié; Jordi Rosell; Carlos Lorenzo; Josep Vallverdú; Rosa Huguet; Antoni Canals; José María Bermúdez de Castro

Human cannibalism is currently recorded in abundant archaeological assemblages of different chronologies. The TD6 level of Gran Dolina (Sierra de Atapuerca, Burgos), at more than 800 ka, is the oldest case known at present. The analysis of cranial and postcranial remains of Homo antecessor has established the presence of various alterations of anthropic origin (cut marks and bone breakage) related with exploitation of carcasses. The human remains do not show a specific distribution, and they appeared mixed with lithic tools and bones of other taxa. Both nonhuman and human remains show similar evidence of butchering processes. The stratigraphic evidence and the new increment of the collection of remains of Homo antecessor have led us to identify a succession of cannibalism events in a dilated temporal sequence. These data suggest that hunting strategies and human meat consumption were frequent and habitual actions. The numerous evidences of cannibalism, the number of individuals, their age profile, and the archaeostratigraphic distribution suggest that cannibalism in TD6 was nutritional. This practice, accepted and included in their social system, is more ancient cultural cannibalism than has been known until now.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2012

Intergroup cannibalism in the European Early Pleistocene: the range expansion and imbalance of power hypotheses.

Palmira Saladié; Rosa Huguet; Antonio Rodríguez-Hidalgo; Isabel Cáceres; Montserrat Esteban-Nadal; Juan Luis Arsuaga; José María Bermúdez de Castro; Eudald Carbonell

In this paper, we compare cannibalism in chimpanzees, modern humans, and in archaeological cases with cannibalism inferred from evidence from the Early Pleistocene assemblage of level TD6 of Gran Dolina (Sierra de Atapuerca, Spain). The cannibalism documented in level TD6 mainly involves the consumption of infants and other immature individuals. The human induced modifications on Homo antecessor and deer remains suggest that butchering processes were similar for both taxa, and the remains were discarded on the living floor in the same way. This finding implies that a group of hominins that used the Gran Dolina cave periodically hunted and consumed individuals from another group. However, the age distribution of the cannibalized hominins in the TD6 assemblage is not consistent with that from other cases of exo-cannibalism by human/hominin groups. Instead, it is similar to the age profiles seen in cannibalism associated with intergroup aggression in chimpanzees. For this reason, we use an analogy with chimpanzees to propose that the TD6 hominins mounted low-risk attacks on members of other groups to defend access to resources within their own territories and to try and expand their territories at the expense of neighboring groups.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2015

Upper Palaeolithic ritualistic cannibalism at Gough's Cave (Somerset, UK): The human remains from head to toe.

Silvia M. Bello; Palmira Saladié; Isabel Cáceres; Antonio Rodríguez-Hidalgo; Sa Parfitt

A recurring theme of late Upper Palaeolithic Magdalenian human bone assemblages is the remarkable rarity of primary burials and the common occurrence of highly-fragmentary human remains mixed with occupation waste at many sites. One of the most extensive Magdalenian human bone assemblages comes from Goughs Cave, a sizeable limestone cave set in Cheddar Gorge (Somerset), UK. After its discovery in the 1880s, the site was developed as a show cave and largely emptied of sediment, at times with minimal archaeological supervision. Some of the last surviving remnants of sediment within the cave were excavated between 1986 and 1992. The excavations uncovered intensively-processed human bones intermingled with abundant butchered large mammal remains and a diverse range of flint, bone, antler, and ivory artefacts. New ultrafiltrated radiocarbon determinations demonstrate that the Upper Palaeolithic human remains were deposited over a very short period of time, possibly during a series of seasonal occupations, about 14,700 years BP (before present). The human remains have been the subject of several taphonomic studies, culminating in a detailed reanalysis of the cranial remains that showed they had been carefully modified to make skull-cups. Our present analysis of the postcrania has identified a far greater degree of human modification than recorded in earlier studies. We identify extensive evidence for defleshing, disarticulation, chewing, crushing of spongy bone, and the cracking of bones to extract marrow. The presence of human tooth marks on many of the postcranial bones provides incontrovertible evidence for cannibalism. In a wider context, the treatment of the human corpses and the manufacture and use of skull-cups at Gough Cave have parallels with other Magdalenian sites in central and western Europe. This suggests that cannibalism during the Magdalenian was part of a customary mortuary practice that combined intensive processing and consumption of the bodies with ritual use of skull-cups.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2010

The Azokh Cave complex: Middle Pleistocene to Holocene human occupation in the Caucasus.

Yolanda Fernández-Jalvo; Tania King; Peter Andrews; Levon Yepiskoposyan; N. Moloney; John Murray; Patricio Domínguez-Alonso; Lena Asryan; Peter Ditchfield; J. van der Made; Trinidad Torres; Paloma Sevilla; M. Nieto Díaz; Isabel Cáceres; Ethel Allué; M.D. Marín Monfort; T. Sanz Martín

Azokh Cave is located near the village of the same name in the Nagorno-Karabagh region of the south-eastern part of the Lesser Caucasus (3937.09’ N and 4659.19’ E, 962 metres –a.s.l.). Azokh Cave and other relevant Acheulian sites in the Caucasus (Fig. 1) were described by Lioubine (2002). Together with Mousterian sites (Klein, 1969, 1999; Hoffecker and Cleghorn, 2000; Hoffecker, 2002; Stringer and Andrews, 2005) and sites producing evidence of the Middle-Late Palaeolithic transition (Joris and Adler 2008), the Caucasus region has provided evidence of continuous human settlement of the area throughout the Pleistocene. The geographical location of these sites indicates the persistence of a natural corridor that Lioubine (2002) named the ‘Caucasus isthmus’ and which we describe as the Trans-Caucasian corridor. Based on a geological survey of Quaternary deposits in collaboration with the Armenian Academy of Sciences (Ferna´ndez-Jalvo et al., 2004; King et al., 2003), we observe that the topography of the area has changed considerably due to tectonic compression and periglacial isostasy. This is in agreement with estimations by GPS studies (Mosar, 2006, Mosar et al., 2007) and ESR (Gru¨n et al., 1999) that establishedan uplift rate of12 to14 mm/year or 0.8–1.0 cm/year, respectively. The corridor has changed greatly since the middle Pleistocene, with uplift and erosion altering the landscape, but it is likely that passage through the Caucasian mountains has always been possible. The Trans-Caucasian corridor and other routes via Turkey and towards Asia (Bar-Yosef and Belfer-Cohen, 2001) were migration pathways during the Pleistocene. Fossil humans in the Caucasian area are scarce. The site of Dmanisi in Georgia yielded the earliest known Eurasian hominins (1.7 Ma, Gabunia et al., 2000; Rightmire et al., 2006; Martino´ n- Torres et al., 2008). Late surviving Neanderthals are present at several sites: Mezmaiskaya Cave, in the Northern Caucasus of Russia (30 ka, Skinner et al., 2005), provided remains of late surviving Neanderthals; a mandible of a 2–3 year old Neanderthal child was found at Barakay Cave (North Caucasus; Lubin et al., 2002). Two incisor fragments and one premolar from Kudaro I may be human (Lioubine, 2002). In this context, Azokh Cave fills an important temporal gap. Azokh Cave contains a nearly continuous stratigraphic section from >300 ka to the present, and mandible fragments of Homo heidelbergensis found at the site (Kasimova, 2001) represent the easternmost extent of this species. Here we review the finds of this long forgotten site and present results of our recent work.

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Rosa Huguet

Spanish National Research Council

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Jordi Rosell

Spanish National Research Council

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Eudald Carbonell

Spanish National Research Council

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Andreu Ollé

Spanish National Research Council

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Ethel Allué

Spanish National Research Council

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Antonio Rodríguez-Hidalgo

Spanish National Research Council

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Maria Bennàsar

Spanish National Research Council

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Josep Vallverdú

Spanish National Research Council

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Montserrat Esteban-Nadal

Spanish National Research Council

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