Timeline of Iberian prehistory

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Paleolithic[]

  • c. 1.5 to 1.8 million years Before Present (BP) Paleolithic – Tools used by hominids at Orce in the province of Granada[1]
  • c. 1 million years BP – Tools used by hominids living near Burgos[2]
  • c. 200,000 BP – In the Paleolithic period the Neanderthal Man enters the Iberian peninsula.
  • c. 70,000 BP
  • c. 50,000 years BP – Ancient mtDNA was partially sequenced in HVR region for three distinct Neanderthals from El Sidrón cave near Piloña province of Asturias
  • 40th millennium BC
  • 35th millennium BC – Beginning of the Neanderthal Châtelperronian cultural period, emanating from Southern France.
  • 33rd millennium BC – Beginning of the modern human Aurignacian culture in Europe.
  • 30th millennium BC – modern humans make way into the Iberian peninsula, coming from Southern France. Here, this genetically homogenous population (characterized by the M173 mutation in the Y chromosome), will supposedly develop the M343 mutation, giving rise to the R1b Haplogroup, still dominant in modern Portuguese and Spanish populations.
  • 28th millennium BC
    • Extinction of the Neanderthal Man in its last refuge – the west of Iberia (in modern Portugal).
    • Gravettian culture in Europe.
  • 20th millennium BC
  • 15th millennium BC – Magdalenian cultural period in Europe.

Mesolithic[]

Neolithic[]

Iberian Middle Bronze Age
Iberian Late Bronze Age

Chalcolithic[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Bruce Bower, Ancient Roads to Europe: African ancestors may have entered Europe surprisingly early (Science News, v. 151 no. 1. January 4, 1997), 12-13
  2. ^ 'First west Europe tooth' found, BBC News, 2007-06-30
  3. ^ Stanley Greenspan, The First Idea: How Symbols, Language, and Intelligence Evolved from Our Primate Ancestors to Modern Humans (DaCapa Press, 2004), ISBN 0-306-81449-8
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