Population Trajectories and Cultural Dynamics of late Neanderthals in Far Western Eurasia

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101045506
EC Contribution
€18,997
Consortium Size
1 orgs
Start Year
2022
Summary

In recent years, knowledge of the processes involved in the disappearance of the Neanderthals and the successful expansion of our species across Eurasia has substantially increased. Still, the spatiotemporal variability of the presumed mechanisms behind Neanderthals’ demise – climate change, fragile demography, inter-species competition – makes it very challenging to evaluate the replacement at a continental scale. The Iberian Peninsula, due to its cul-de-sac position and the role of its southern regions as one of the last refugia for the Neanderthals, represents an ideal natural setting for testing models of cultural and demographic trajectories leading to the final disappearance of those populations. FINISTERRA seeks to expand this framework by implementing an integrative, interdisciplinary, multi-scale approach to the archaeological and paleoenvironmental records associated with late Neanderthals in southwestern Iberia. Supported by an unprecedented combination of geoarchaeological, chronological, and paleoecological evidence, FINISTERRA will specifically (1) provide a detailed characterization of late Neanderthal adaptive systems, presenting high-resolution data on the timeline of events leading to their final disappearance; (2) investigate the presence of the so-called early warning signals of Neanderthals’ collapse through the use of cutting-edge quantitative analyses of cultural and demographic trajectories; (3) explore alternative hypotheses of a gradual or sudden loss of Neanderthals’ resilience by considering the impacts of climate change and the spread of modern humans into western Eurasia. The results of this project will have crucial implications for our understanding of the factors contributing to the demise of our sister species, which ultimately were key components for our own success and uniqueness.

Consortium (1)

Project Results (6)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (5)
Late Neanderthal subsistence and foraging mobility at Lapa do Picareiro: a zooarchaeological and taphonomic analysis of Level JJ
Frontiers in Environmental Archaeology· 2025DOI
Milena Carvalho, Jonathan A. Haws, Emily Lena Jones
Alternating carnivore and Neanderthal activities at Escoural Cave: insights from the taphonomic and machine learning analysis of leporid remains
Frontiers in Environmental Archaeology· 2024DOI
Lucía Cobo-Sánchez, Anna Rufà, João Cascalheira
Comparing extraction method efficiency for high-throughput palaeoproteomic bone species identification
Scientific Reports· 2023DOI
Dorothea Mylopotamitaki, Florian S. Harking, Alberto J. Taurozzi, Zandra Fagernäs, Ricardo M. Godinho, Geoff M. Smith, Marcel Weiss, Tim Schüler, Shannon P. McPherron, Harald Meller, João Cascalheira, Nuno Bicho, Jesper V. Olsen, Jean-Jacques Hublin, Frido Welker
Creating frames of reference for chert exploitation during the Late Pleistocene in Southwesternmost Iberia
PLOS ONE· 2023DOI
Joana Belmiro, Xavier Terradas, João Cascalheira
The sediment at the end of the tunnel: Geophysical research to locate the Pleistocene entrance of Gruta da Companheira (Algarve, Southern Portugal)
Archaeological Prospection· 2023DOI
Barbieri, Alvise; Regala, Federico T.; Cascalheira, João; Bicho, Nuno
Other Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 1 - FINISTERRA (Population Trajectories and Cultural Dynamics of late Neanderthals in Far Western Eurasia)