Updated
Updated · Archaeology News Online Magazine · May 27
Payre's 9 Fossil Teeth Reveal 250,000-Year Regional Diversity in Early Neanderthals
Updated
Updated · Archaeology News Online Magazine · May 27

Payre's 9 Fossil Teeth Reveal 250,000-Year Regional Diversity in Early Neanderthals

3 articles · Updated · Archaeology News Online Magazine · May 27
  • Nine teeth from France's Payre site, dated to about 250,000 years ago, show early European Neanderthals did not follow a single evolutionary pattern.
  • Micro-CT scans and geometric morphometric analysis exposed internal enamel and dentine structures that older studies could not see, strengthening evidence for mixed traits within the small sample.
  • Lower-layer teeth—especially front teeth—carry simpler features linked to earlier human groups, while upper layers show more derived Neanderthal traits within the same excavation sequence.
  • Some Payre features also match fossils from Biache-Saint-Vaast and Montmaurin-La Niche in France, while others resemble the older Sima de los Huesos sample in Spain.
  • The study argues Middle Pleistocene climate swings repeatedly split and reconnected European populations, making regional population structure—not a linear progression—a better model for Neanderthal evolution.
Did climate change force Neanderthals into diverse groups, shattering the idea of a single evolutionary path?
Our ancestors' DNA hints at interbreeding, but could it just be a story of long-lost, isolated groups?