Archaeologists have recovered 90,000 stone tools from the site, which lies close to Ukraine’s southwestern border with Hungary and Romania.
Some 90,000 stone tools made by early humans have been found at the site but no human fossils.
Garba‘s colleagues measured two nuclides, aluminum-26 and beryllium-10, found in quartz grains from seven pebbles discovered in the same layer as the stone tools.
The earliest human fossils unearthed in Europe are from the Atapuerca site in Spain and date back 1.1 million years, according to the study.
Korolevo would have been appealing to ancient humans because it’s near the Tisza River, which leads to the Danube, and there was a readily available source of hard rock to knap stone tools, Garba said.
Persons:
Roman Garba, ”, “, ” Garba, Garba, It’s, Briana Pobiner, wasn’t, hominins
Organizations:
CNN, Czech Academy of Sciences, Archaeological Institute, NAS, Smithsonian National Museum of
Locations:
Ukraine, Europe, Prague, Hungary, Romania, Africa, Spain, Georgia, Dmanisi, Washington , DC, hominins