The oldest fossil hominin from Italy: Reassessment of the femoral diaphysis from Venosa-Notarchirico in its Acheulean context

Bibliographic Collection: 
APE
Publication Type: Journal Article
Authors: Micarelli, Ileana; Minozzi, Simona; Rodríguez, Laura; Di Vincenzo, Fabio; García-González, Rebeca; Giuffra, Valentina; Paine, Robert R.; Carretero, José-Miguel; Fornaciari, Gino; Moncel, Marie-Hélène; Manzi, Giorgio
Year of Publication: 2024
Journal: Quaternary Science Reviews
Volume: 334
Pagination: 108709
Date Published: 2024/06/15/
Publication Language: eng
ISBN Number: 0277-3791
Keywords: 3D morphology, Bone micro-anatomy, Early Acheulean, Europe, Human evolution, Middle Pleistocene, Paleopathology
Abstract:

Venosa-Notarchirico is a musealized Lower Paleolithic site in southern Italy (Basilicata), where a human femoral shaft was discovered in 1985. The fossil specimen can be evaluated in the new light of excavations started in 2016, which provide a more updated and extensive picture of the site, including the crucial Ar/Ar date of 661-614 ka for the human specimen. This makes the fossil diaphysis from Venosa-Notarchirico (Vn-H1) the oldest fossil hominin found so far in the Italian peninsula, associated with the earliest evidence of genuine Acheulean in Europe. In this paper, we report a comparative morphometric analysis of this femur, as well as a paleopathological reappraisal of the periosteal alteration that affects the specimen, supported by an unpublished histological analysis. Vn-H1 represents the proximal two-thirds of a right femur lacking the epiphyseal region. We argue it belonged to an immature individual, possibly a juvenile (late adolescent). Its features suggest that the specimen may refer to an archaic (i.e., non-modern) human species, also showing morphological differences compared to fossil samples of the Neanderthal lineage. We also support the identification of a pathological condition affecting Vn-H1, particularly evident in some preserved portions of the mid-shaft as described here. Its etiology is discussed after differential diagnosis, which led us to suggest an alteration of inflammatory origin, viewed as a nonspecific periosteal response. This pathology may have been roughly concomitant with the death of the individual.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2024.108709
Short Title: Quaternary Science Reviews
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