Periodic Reporting for period 4 - CROSSROADS (Human Evolution at the Crossroads)
Période du rapport: 2021-10-01 au 2022-03-31
CROSSROADS was an ambitious, groundbreaking research program that built on the foundation of the PI's previous research to further promote paleoanthropological research in Greece and neighboring countries. It focused on the early part of the Paleolithic and had four broadly defined goals: 1. the development of an overarching chronological framework for paleolithic and paleoanthropological evidence in Greece; 2. the development of a paleoenvironmental framework for the Pleistocene of Greece, within which changes in the fossil and archaeological record can be interpreted; 3. the identification of new evidence; and 4. the (re-) interpretation of existing fossil human remains using state of the art approaches.
CROSSROADS was conducted in close collaboration with partners in Greece, including the Ephoreia of Paleoanthropology and Speleology, Greek Ministry of Culture, the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, and the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, and internationally.
Finally, we have made significant progress with the state of the art analysis of the existing human fossil record of the region, which constituted the fourth main goal of the project. Most notable here was the virtual reconstruction and analysis of the Apidima fossil crania, published in July 2019 by PI K. Harvati, CROSSROADS team members and collaborators in the highest ranking scientific journal Nature, and widely reported in the international media. Furthermore, we have developed new techniques and approaches for the interpretation of the fossil human remains, which will be applied to the Greek fossil record in the next phase.
The results of the project's work were presented regularly in scientific conferences and in invited lectures by the PI and team members around the world and virtually. They have also been in many cases extensively reported on in the press, both in Germany (host country of the project) and Greece (where most of the research took place), but also internationally.
Furthermore, results from the chronological and paleoenvironmental analyses from the Megalopolis basin have demostrated convincingly the role that this region played as a glacial refugium, where human, plant and animal populations survived during glacial times, when large parts of the European continent became uninhabitable. A first study showing this has already been published, while several more supporting this result were presented at the CROSSROADS closing conference and in the pipeline for publication. This is a major result which convincingly demonstrates the presence of humans in the Megalopolis basin at Marathousa 1 during the glacial MIS 12, as confirmed by chronological analyses but also environmental and temperature reconstructions that indicate glacial conditions at the time of human presence..