Wadi Zin basin in the Ein Avdat National Park. Star indicates the location of Boker Tachtit.
Credit: Weizmann Institute of Science
The Boker Tachtit archaeological excavation site in Israel's central Negev desert holds clues to one of the most significant events in human history: the spread of modern humans, Homo sapiens, from Africa into Eurasia, and the subsequent demise of Neanderthal populations in the region.
Researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science and the Max Planck Society, led by Prof. Elisabetta Boaretto, together with Dr. Omry Barzilai of the Israel Antiquities Authority, returned to Boker Tachtit nearly 40 years after it was first excavated. Using advanced sampling and dating methods, they offer a new chronological framework for this important chapter in our anthropological evolution. Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the study suggests that Homo sapiens and Neanderthals were far from strangers.
According to the "recent African origin" theory, Homo sapiens originated in Africa as recently as 270,000 years ago, and at different times took either the northern route to Eurasia, passing through the Levant, or several possible southern routes to remote corners of Asia and even Oceania—reaching as far as Australia by land. Boker Tachtit, located in the Wadi Zin basin, in what today is the Ein Avdat National Park, is considered a key site for tracing this migration. It is a major site in the Levant for documenting an important period in humankind's prehistory: the transition from Middle to Upper Paleolithic—in other words, from a predominantly Neanderthal prehistorical culture to the beginning of modern humans' reign. This transition was marked by technological innovations such as blade production and the introduction of standardized tools made from bones and antlers.
American archaeologist Anthony Marks, who first excavated and published his analysis of Boker Tachtit in the early 1980s, defines the site as a transitional industry from the Middle to the Upper Paleolithic and, based on a single radiocarbon date, concluded that it dates to 47,000 years ago. The problem was, however, that additional dates obtained from the site, some reaching 34,000 years ago, made the timing of the transition very problematic.
According to the "recent African origin" theory, Homo sapiens originated in Africa as recently as 270,000 years ago, and at different times took either the northern route to Eurasia, passing through the Levant, or several possible southern routes to remote corners of Asia and even Oceania—reaching as far as Australia by land. Boker Tachtit, located in the Wadi Zin basin, in what today is the Ein Avdat National Park, is considered a key site for tracing this migration. It is a major site in the Levant for documenting an important period in humankind's prehistory: the transition from Middle to Upper Paleolithic—in other words, from a predominantly Neanderthal prehistorical culture to the beginning of modern humans' reign. This transition was marked by technological innovations such as blade production and the introduction of standardized tools made from bones and antlers.
American archaeologist Anthony Marks, who first excavated and published his analysis of Boker Tachtit in the early 1980s, defines the site as a transitional industry from the Middle to the Upper Paleolithic and, based on a single radiocarbon date, concluded that it dates to 47,000 years ago. The problem was, however, that additional dates obtained from the site, some reaching 34,000 years ago, made the timing of the transition very problematic.
View of the Boker Tachtit excavation site.
Circled: a group of unearthed flint stone artifacts.
(r) Flint point representative of the Upper Paleolithic in Boker Tachtit.
Credit: Clara Amit, Israel Antiquities Authority
"If we are to follow this timeline, then the transitional period could have lasted more than 10,000 years, and yet artifacts excavated from northern sites in Israel, Lebanon, and even Turkey suggest that the transition occurred much faster," says Prof. Boaretto, who heads the Dangoor Research Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (D-REAMS) Laboratory at the Weizmann Institute, which specializes in advanced archaeological dating methods. "Marks managed to date only a few specimens from Boker Tachtit, owing to the limitations of radiocarbon dating then, and the range of his proposed dates is not consistent with evidence gathered from other—old and new—excavation sites in the region," Prof. Boaretto says. "Radiocarbon dating, the method that he used in his study, has evolved tremendously since his time."
To resolve these questions, Prof. Boaretto, Dr. Barzilai, and their multidisciplinary team performed advanced dating methods on specimens obtained from Boker Tachtit during their 2013-2015 excavations. These methods included the latest techniques, such as high-resolution radiocarbon dating of single charcoal pieces found at the site and optically stimulated luminescence dating of quartz sand grains, performed at the Weizmann Institute and at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, respectively. The researchers also integrated detailed studies of the sediments, using microarchaeological methods to understand how the site was formed physically, contributing necessary data for the construction of its chronological framework.
"We are now able to conclude with greater confidence that the Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition was a rather fast-evolving event that began at Boker Tachtit approximately 50-49,000 years ago and ended about 44,000 years ago," says Prof. Boaretto. This dating allows for a certain overlap between the material transition that occurred at Boker Tachtit and that of the Mediterranean woodland region (Lebanon and Turkey) between 49,000 and 46,000 years ago. Still, it shows that Boker Tachtit was the earliest site for this transition in the Levant and that, based on the materials found, it is a testimony to the last dispersal event of modern humans from Africa.
According to the new dating scheme, the early phase at Boker Tachtit also overlaps with the previous Middle Paleolithic culture in the region—that of the Neanderthals. "This goes to show that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens in the Negev coexisted and most likely interacted with one another, resulting in not only genetic interbreeding, as is postulated by the 'recent African origin' theory, but also in cultural exchange," Prof. Boaretto and Dr. Barzilai conclude.
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