Earliest evidence of pollution by heavy metals in archaeological sites
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Abstract
Homo species were exposed to a new biogeochemical environment when they began to occupy
caves. Here we report the first evidence of palaeopollution through geochemical analyses of heavy
metals in four renowned archaeological caves of the Iberian Peninsula spanning the last million years
of human evolution. Heavy metal contents reached high values due to natural (guano deposition) and
anthropogenic factors (e.g. combustion) in restricted cave environments. The earliest anthropogenic
pollution evidence is related to Neanderthal hearths from Gorham̕s Cave (Gibraltar), being one of
the first milestones in the so-called “Anthropocene”. According to its heavy metal concentration,
these sediments meet the present-day standards of “contaminated soil”. Together with the
former, the Gibraltar Vanguard Cave, shows Zn and Cu pollution ubiquitous across highly anthropic
levels pointing to these elements as potential proxies for human activities. Pb concentrations in
Magdalenian and Bronze age levels at El Pirulejo site can be similarly interpreted. Despite these high
pollution levels, the contaminated soils might not have posed a major threat to Homo populations.
Altogether, the data presented here indicate a long-term exposure of Homo to these elements,
via fires, fumes and their ashes, which could have played certain role in environmental-pollution
tolerance, a hitherto neglected influence.
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Bibliographic citation
Monge, G., Jiménez Espejo, F., García Alix, A., Martínez Ruiz, F., Mattielli, N., Finlayson, C., Ohkouchi, N., Cortés Sánchez, M., Bermúdez de Castro, J.M., Blasco, R., Rosell, J., Carrión García, J.S., Rodríguez Vidal, J., Finlayson, G.: "Earliest evidence of pollution by heavy metals in archaeological sites". Scientific Reports. 5:14252 (2015). DOI: 10.1038/srep14252







