The timing of the earliest habitation and oldest stone technologies in different regions of the world remains a contentious topic in the study of human evolution. Here we contribute to this debate with detailed magnetostratigraphic results on two exposed parallel sections of lacustrine sediments at Xiaochangliang in the Nihewan Basin, north China; these results place stringent controls on the age of Palaeolithic stone artifacts that were originally reported over two decades ago. Our palaeomagnetic findings indicate that the artifact layer resides in a reverse polarity magnetozone bounded by the Olduvai and Jaramillo subchrons. Coupled with an estimated rate of sedimentation, these findings constrain the layer's age to roughly 1.36 million years ago. This result represents the age of the oldest known stone assemblage comprising recognizable types of Palaeolithic tool in east Asia, and the earliest definite occupation in this region as far north as 40 degrees N.
[1] The Matuyama-Brunhes (M/B) boundary, termination of Jaramillo normal subchron (J/M) as well as three young geomagnetic excursions has been revealed in the Weinan loess section [Zhu et al., 1994[Zhu et al., , 1998[Zhu et al., , 1999. Recently, we carried out further paleomagnetic directional studies on the same section and recovered the onset of the Jaramillo normal subchron (M/J) and four geomagnetic excursions, two in the Brunhes and two in the late Matuyama. The fact that all seven excursions found in this section are in loess units and expected excursions in paleosols are not found suggests that short-lived geomagnetic signals could be only recorded in loess units, and may have been fully smoothed or wiped out in paleosol units by strong pedogenesis. Constrained by a new astronomical timescale (HLD 00 ), ages of the geomagnetic excursions and reversal boundaries have been estimated. We tentatively correlated these excursions with previous results, indicating that a large lock-in model may not be correct for the whole loess profile, although some apparently big positive age discrepancies were observed for the main boundaries.
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