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400,000 year-old 'Neanderthal' fossil discovered by archaeologists in Portugal

Discovery was made in 2014 but it has taken more than two years to remove the cranium from the sediment

Tuesday 21 March 2017 17:05 EDT
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The Aroeira 3 cranium
The Aroeira 3 cranium (Javier Trueba)

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Archaeologists have found a 400,000 year-old fossil which is believed to be related to Neanderthals.

On the last day of an expedition to the Gruta da Aroeira cave in Portugal a fossil of a human cranium was found.

The discovery was made in 2014 but it has taken more than two years to remove the cranium from the sediment.

"This is an interesting new fossil discovery from the Iberian Peninsula, a crucial region for understanding the origin and evolution of the Neanderthals," said Rolf Quam, co-author of the study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Researchers have not been able to ascertain if the cranium belongs to a male or a female but they are sure it belongs to an adult.

"There are some features that are telling us that these guys are ancestors of the Neanderthals — they're not fully Neanderthal yet, but they're on the way," Mr Quam added.

The expedition was so fruitful that archaeologists also discovered a set of Acheulean stone tools and a teardrop-shaped hand-axe tools believed to have originated in the Middle East.

It is estimated that the tools first appeared in Europe about 500,000 years ago.

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