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Newly  Discovered Archaeological Sites In India  Reveals Ancient Life



BERNAMA - Newly Discovered Archaeological Sites In India Reveals Ancient Life




     LONDON, Feb 23 (Bernama) --  Newly discovered archaeological sites in  southern and northern India have revealed how people lived before and  after the colossal Toba volcanic eruption 74,000 years ago, according to  Press Trust of India (PTI) on Tuesday.


 The international and multidisciplinary research team, led by Oxford  University in collaboration with Indian institutions, has uncovered what  it calls 'Pompeii-like excavations' beneath the Toba ash.


 The seven-year project examines the environment that humans lived in,  their stone tools, as well as the plants and animal bones of the time.


 "This suggests that human populations were present in India prior to  74,000 years ago, or about 15,000 years earlier than expected based on  some genetic clocks," said project director Michael Petraglia, Senior  Research Fellow in the School of Archaeology at the University of  Oxford.


 The team has concluded that many forms of life survived  he  super-eruption, contrary to other research which has suggested  significant animal extinctions and genetic bottlenecks.


 According to the team, a potentially ground-breaking implication of the  new work is that the species responsible for making the stone tools in  India was Homo sapiens.


 Stone tool analysis has revealed that the artefacts consist of cores  and flakes, which are classified in India as Middle Palaeolithic and are  similar to those made by modern humans in Africa.


 "Though we are still searching for human fossils to definitively prove  the case, we are encouraged by the technological similarities.


 An area of widespread speculation about the Toba super-eruption is that  it nearly drove humanity to extinction.


 The fact that the Middle Palaeolithic tools of similar styles are found  right before and after the Toba super-eruption, suggests that the  people who survived the eruption were the same populations, using the  same kinds of tools, says Petraglia.


 The research agrees with evidence that other human ancestors, such as  the Neanderthals in Europe and the small brained Hobbits in Southeastern  Asia, continued to survive well after Toba.


 Although some scholars have speculated that the Toba volcano led to  severe and wholesale environmental destruction, the Oxford-led research  in India suggests that a mosaic of ecological settings was present, and  some areas experienced a relatively rapid recovery after the volcanic  event.


 The team has not discovered much bone in Toba ash sites, but in the  Billasurgam cave complex in Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh, the researchers  have found deposits which they believe range from at least 100,000 years  ago to the present.


 They contain a wealth of animal bones such as wild cattle, carnivores  and monkeys.


 They have also identified plant materials in the Toba ash sites and  caves, yielding important information about the impact of the Toba  super-eruption on the ecological settings.


 


Forwarded by SPN member Snowleopard ji :happykaur:


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