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The Nesher Ramla site was discovered in a karst depression following quarrying from a nearby cement factory. The site was excavated by archaeologists between 2010–2011 and yielded artefacts in archaeological deposits from the Middle Paleolithic that were reported by D. Friesem, Y. Zaidner, and R. Shahack-Gross. [2]
Nesher Ramla Homo: 140±120 Nesher Ramla Homo or Homo neanderthalensis: 2021 Israel: Israel Hershkovitz Maba Man: 140±120 early modern human, Homo neanderthalensis. or Denisovan. 1958 Shaogun, China: Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology: LH 18 120±30 Homo sapiens: 1976 Ngaloba beds at Laetoli, Tanzania: Mary Leakey [111 ...
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The genus Homo is placed in the tribe Hominini alongside Pan (chimpanzees). ... Nesher Ramla Homo classification uncertain: 140–120 Israel: several individuals 2021
membership in Homo uncertain: 1,900 Kenya: 700 2 sites 1972 1986 H. gautengensis ... Nesher Ramla Homo classification uncertain: 140–120 Israel: several individuals
Homo longi – Archaic human from China, 146,000 BP Homo naledi – South African archaic human species Nesher Ramla Homo – Extinct population of archaic humans
In 2021, Israeli anthropologist Israel Hershkovitz and colleagues suggested the 140- to 120,000-year-old Israeli Nesher Ramla remains, which feature a mix of Neanderthal and more ancient H. erectus traits, represent one such source population which recolonised Europe following a glacial period. [176]
Hershkovitz et al. (2021) report the discovery of fossils of archaic members of the genus Homo from the site of Nesher Ramla , possessing a distinctive combination of Neanderthal and archaic features, and interpret these fossils as likely representing late-surviving populations of Middle Pleistocene members of the genus Homo; [91] a study on ...