Natural Environment Research Council
 
Archaeologists rediscover the lost home of the last  Neanderthals
17 October 2013 
A record of Neanderthal archaeology, thought to be long lost,  has been 
re-discovered by NERC-funded scientists working in the Channel island  of 
Jersey. 
The study, published today in the Journal of Quaternary Science,  reveals 
that a key archaeological site has preserved geological deposits which  were 
thought to have been lost through excavation 100 years ago. 
The discovery was made when the team undertook fieldwork to stabilise and  
investigate a portion of the La Cotte de St Brelade cave, on Jersey's south  
eastern coastline. 
A large portion of the site contains sediments dating to the last Ice Age,  
preserving 250,000 years of climate change and archaeological evidence. 
The site, which has produced more Neanderthal stone tools than the rest of  
the British Isles put together, contains the only known late Neanderthal 
remains  from North West Europe. These offer archaeologists one of the most 
important  records of Neanderthal behaviour available. 
"In terms of the volume of sediment, archaeological richness and depth of  
time, there is nothing else like it known in the British Isles. Given that 
we  thought these deposits had been removed entirely by previous researchers, 
 finding that so much still remains is as exciting as discovering a new 
site,"  says Dr Matt Pope of the Institute of Archaeology at University College 
London,  who helped lead the research.
 
The team dated sediments at the site using a technique called Optically  
Stimulated Luminesce, which measures the last time sand grains were exposed to 
 sunlight. This was carried out at the Luminescence Dating Research 
Laboratory  for Archaeology and the History of Art at Oxford University. 
The results showed that part of the sequence of sediments dates between  
100,000 and 47,000 years old, indicating that Neanderthal teeth which were  
discovered at the site in 1910 were younger than previously thought, and  
probably belonged to one of the last Neanderthals to live in the region. 
"The discovery that these deposits still exist and can be related to  
previously excavated deposits opens up a range of exciting possibilities," says 
 
Dr Martin Bates, University of Trinity St Davids, who is leading current  
fieldwork at the site. 
The findings bring the large collections of stone tools, animal bone and 
the  Neanderthal remains from the area under renewed study. 
"Excavation in the future will provide us with the opportunity to subject 
the  site to the wide range of approaches we use today in Palaeolithic 
archaeology  and Quaternary science. For example we are hoping to be able to 
link 
our site  with the broader Neanderthal landscapes through study of similarly 
aged deposits  around the island and, through bathymetric survey, on the 
seabed," says  Bates. 
"We were sure from the outset that the deposits held some archaeological  
potential, but these dates indicate we have uncovered something exceptional," 
 explains Pope. "We have a sequence of deposits which span the last 120,000 
years  still preserved at the site. Crucially, this covers the period in 
which  Neanderthal populations apparently went 'extinct'."
 
It was during this period that Neanderthals appear to have been replaced by 
 our own species - Homo sapiens. 
The NERC-funded work represented the first formal programme of scientific  
research to be focused on the site since the early 1980s. The site has since 
 then been managed and preserved by the Société Jerisaise, the Jersey-based 
 academic society involved in early investigation of the site and which 
continues  to manage and protect the site through to the present day. 
"For over a hundred years the Societe has tried to maintain the interest of 
 the wider academic world in La Cotte, having realised its international  
importance from the beginning. We are delighted, therefore, that such a  
prestigious team is now studying the site, and, in addition, the wider  
Palaeolithic landscape of Jersey," says Neil Molyneux, president of the Société 
 
Jersiaise 
The wider project, supported also by the Arts and Humanities Research 
Council  and the Jersey Government will now continue to investigate the site 
and 
material  excavated from it over the past 110 years. 
"Working with our partners to bring these rediscovered sediments under new  
analysis will allow us to bring the lives of the last Neanderthal groups to 
live  in North West Europe into clearer focus," says Pope.  
"We may be able to use this evidence to better understand  when Neanderthal 
populations disappeared form the region and whether they ever  shared the 
landscape with the species which ultimately replaced them, us," he  concludes.

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