Volunteers find 560,000-year-old milk tooth in France
French and Spanish volunteer archaeologists have discovered a child's milk tooth dating back 560,000 years in the mountains of southern France -- an "exceptional fossil", researchers said Tuesday.
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The fossil was discovered in the Arago Cave, a vast prehistoric grotto at Tautavel on the French side of the Pyrenees mountains bordering Spain [Credit: EPCC Tautavel] |
The site's laboratory confirmed the tooth belonged to a human sub-species, likely homo heidelbergensis, which shares features with both modern humans and our homo erectus ancestors.
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Analysis of the marks on the tooth could reveal the secrets of Homo heidelbergensis [Credit: Getty Images] |
The tooth is estimated to date back 560,000 years -- give or take 5,000 years -- which would make it 100,000 years older than the famous Tautavel Man whose skull was found at the same site in 1971.
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Teeth and other discovered in the Arago Cave, a vast prehistoric grotto at Tautavel [Credit: Getty Images] |
Chevalier said the milk tooth -- the first found at the site -- would "teach us lots of things about man's behaviour" at the time.
Researchers have long grappled with the question of how people lived in the cave at Tautavel, where some 150 ancient human fossils have been found.
They have yet to determine whether it was a temporary shelter where our ancestors stopped off for a hunting break, or whether families made it a more permanent home -- a mystery the milk tooth could help solve.
Source: AFP [July 24, 2018]
Interesting discovery. It's also interesting to learn how the milk tooth samples survived/remained preserved all these years.
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