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Dive into the research topics where Luis Gibert is active.

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Featured researches published by Luis Gibert.


Nature | 2009

The oldest hand-axes in Europe

Gary R. Scott; Luis Gibert

Stone tools are durable reminders of the activities, skills and customs of early humans, and have distinctive morphologies that reflect the development of technological skills during the Pleistocene epoch. In Africa, large cutting tools (hand-axes and bifacial chopping tools) became part of Palaeolithic technology during the Early Pleistocene (∼1.5 Myr ago). However, in Europe this change had not been documented until the Middle Pleistocene (<0.5 Myr ago). Here we report dates for two western Mediterranean hand-axe sites that are nearly twice the age of the supposed earliest Acheulian in western Europe. Palaeomagnetic analysis of these two sites in southeastern Spain found reverse polarity magnetozones, showing that hand-axes were already in Europe as early as 0.9 Myr ago. This expanded antiquity for European hand-axe culture supports a wide geographic distribution of Palaeolithic bifacial technology outside of Africa during the Early Pleistocene.


Geology | 2013

Evidence for an African-Iberian mammal dispersal during the pre-evaporitic Messinian

Luis Gibert; Gary R. Scott; Plini Montoya; Francisco Javier Ruiz-Sánchez; Jorge Morales; Luis Luque; Juan Abella; María Lería

The accurate timing of biogeographic dispersal can be determined by examining the age of fossiliferous strata on either side of a physical barrier. Here we show that African mammals migrated to Iberia and European mammals migrated to North Africa at the same time before isolation of the Mediterranean Sea during the Messinian. The fossil site of Venta del Moro (Spain) exhibits western Europe’s most complete vertebrate fauna for the latest Miocene. Its uniquely cosmopolitan assemblage is evidence of faunal dispersals from Africa and Asia to Europe during the latest Miocene glaciation. A preliminary paleomagnetic study suggested an age of 5.8 Ma for this site, but our expanded magnetostratigraphy dates the site at 6.23 Ma. In addition, we recalibrated the paleomagnetic age of the Librilla site (Spain) and the North Africa site of Afoud-1 (Morocco) using the Astronomical Tuned Neogene Time Scale. Our results show a two-way African-Iberian mammal dispersal just before 6.2 Ma. These new ages indicate that an ephemeral land corridor existed between the two continents 250 k.y. before the onset of the Messinian Salinity Crisis, reflecting a tentative initial isolation of the Mediterranean Sea. This corridor developed after tectonics closed the Betic Seaway at 6.3 Ma and during the intensification of the latest Miocene glaciation at 6.26 Ma, when water circulation in the Mediterranean became very restricted.


Nature | 2015

New species from Ethiopia further expands Middle Pliocene hominin diversity

Yohannes Haile-Selassie; Luis Gibert; Stephanie M. Melillo; Timothy M. Ryan; Mulugeta Alene; Alan L. Deino; Naomi E. Levin; Gary R. Scott; Beverly Z. Saylor

Middle Pliocene hominin species diversity has been a subject of debate over the past two decades, particularly after the naming of Australopithecus bahrelghazali and Kenyanthropus platyops in addition to the well-known species Australopithecus afarensis. Further analyses continue to support the proposal that several hominin species co-existed during this time period. Here we recognize a new hominin species (Australopithecus deyiremeda sp. nov.) from 3.3–3.5-million-year-old deposits in the Woranso–Mille study area, central Afar, Ethiopia. The new species from Woranso–Mille shows that there were at least two contemporaneous hominin species living in the Afar region of Ethiopia between 3.3 and 3.5 million years ago, and further confirms early hominin taxonomic diversity in eastern Africa during the Middle Pliocene epoch. The morphology of Au. deyiremeda also reinforces concerns related to dentognathic (that is, jaws and teeth) homoplasy in Plio–Pleistocene hominins, and shows that some dentognathic features traditionally associated with Paranthropus and Homo appeared in the fossil record earlier than previously thought.


Geology | 2011

Seismically induced slump on an extremely gentle slope (<1°) of the Pleistocene Tecopa paleolake (California)

Francisco J. García-Tortosa; P. Alfaro; Luis Gibert; Gary R. Scott

A superbly exposed ∼5 km 2 slump is developed in middle Pleistocene lacustrine deposits of the Tecopa Basin (California, United States). A subhorizontal detachment (


Current Anthropology | 2015

Two Deciduous Human Molars from the Early Pleistocene Deposits of Barranco León (Orce, Spain)

Francesc Ribot; Luis Gibert; Carles Ferràndez-Cañadell; Enrique García Olivares; Florentina Sánchez; María Lería

Recently Toro-Moyano et al. (2013) reported a deciduous tooth from Barranco León (Spain; BL02-J54-100) and claimed it to be the oldest human fossil in Europe. In that paper, the authors suggest that a previously reported human molar fragment from the same site (BL5-0) was not human but a deciduous molar of Hippopotamus found out of stratigraphic context. Here, we show the stratigraphic and spatial position of BL5-0, and we separate it from deciduous teeth of Hippopotamus. We conclude that two human deciduous molars have been discovered at the Barranco León site. Both teeth were found 9 meters apart, have a similar size, are heavily worn on the occlusal surface, have a nearly identical interstitial contact facet, and in both cases the roots are practically missing due to resorption. These similarities and the proximity of the finds suggest that both molars probably belonged to the same individual.


Archive | 2016

The Geologic Context of Korsi Dora and the Partial Skeleton KSD-VP-1/1

Beverly Z. Saylor; Mulugeta Alene; Alan L. Deino; Luis Gibert; Yohannes Haile-Selassie; Stephanie M. Melillo; Gary R. Scott

KSD-VP-1/1, a partial skeleton of Australopithecus afarensis , was excavated from Pliocene strata at Korsi Dora, 3.3 km southeast of the confluence of the Waki and Mille rivers in the northwestern part of the Woranso-Mille paleoanthropological research site. A tuff collected from ~2.7 m below the fossil horizon, at the bottom of a trench dug 25 m to the east of the fossil excavation, yielded an 40Ar/39Ar age of 3.60 ± 0.03 Ma for anorthoclase feldspar. Strata in the trench and the fossil excavation site comprise a single normal magnetozone interpreted as part of the normal subchron C2An.3n, immediately above the Gauss/Gilbert paleomagnetic transition. Geologic mapping and tephrochemical analyses combined with paleomagnetic data place the fossil horizon and the trench section into local and regional stratigraphic context by constraining the partial skeleton to be younger than the Kilaytoli tuff (KT), a ~4 m thick vitric ash with an anorthoclase feldspar age of 3.570 ± 0.014 Ma. This unit is widely recognized at Korsi Dora, in collection areas north of the Waki-Mille confluence and outside the field area. The KT correlates with the Lokochot Tuff of the Omo-Turkana Basin in Kenya. Sedimentological features of the mudstone and sandstone in and near the excavation site are consistent with deposition in a floodplain or floodplain lake proximal to a stream channel.


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

An early Australopithecus afarensis postcranium from Woranso-Mille, Ethiopia

Yohannes Haile-Selassie; Bruce Latimer; Mulugeta Alene; Alan L. Deino; Luis Gibert; Stephanie M. Melillo; Beverly Z. Saylor; Gary R. Scott; C. Owen Lovejoy


Terra Nova | 2010

The significance of giant seismites in the Plio-Pleistocene Baza palaeo-lake (S Spain)

P. Alfaro; Luis Gibert; Massimo Moretti; Francisco J. García-Tortosa; Carlos Sanz de Galdeano; Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar; A. C. López-Garrido


Sedimentary Geology | 2011

Superposed deformed beds produced by single earthquakes (Tecopa Basin, California): Insights into paleoseismology

Luis Gibert; P. Alfaro; Francisco J. García-Tortosa; Gary R. Scott


Journal of Human Evolution | 2016

Chronology for the Cueva Victoria fossil site (SE Spain): Evidence for Early Pleistocene Afro-Iberian dispersals

Luis Gibert; Gary R. Scott; Denis Scholz; Alexander Budsky; Carles Ferràndez; Francesc Ribot; Robert A. Martin; María Lería

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Gary R. Scott

Berkeley Geochronology Center

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Alan L. Deino

Berkeley Geochronology Center

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Beverly Z. Saylor

Case Western Reserve University

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Yohannes Haile-Selassie

Cleveland Museum of Natural History

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P. Alfaro

University of Alicante

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