New Study: Modern Humans Had Many Failed Attempts to Settle in Europe

Women from the Samburu tribe receive a food donation given due to an ongoing drought, in the town of Oldonyiro, Isiolo county, Kenya, October 8, 2021. (Reuters File Photo)
Women from the Samburu tribe receive a food donation given due to an ongoing drought, in the town of Oldonyiro, Isiolo county, Kenya, October 8, 2021. (Reuters File Photo)
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New Study: Modern Humans Had Many Failed Attempts to Settle in Europe

Women from the Samburu tribe receive a food donation given due to an ongoing drought, in the town of Oldonyiro, Isiolo county, Kenya, October 8, 2021. (Reuters File Photo)
Women from the Samburu tribe receive a food donation given due to an ongoing drought, in the town of Oldonyiro, Isiolo county, Kenya, October 8, 2021. (Reuters File Photo)

Modern humans made several failed attempts to settle in Europe before eventually taking over the continent. This is the stark conclusion of scientists who have been studying the course of Homo sapiens' exodus from Africa tens of thousands of years ago, according to a report by The Guardian.

Researchers have recently pinpointed sites in Bulgaria, Romania and the Czech Republic where our ancestors' remains have been dated as being between 40,000 to 50,000 years old. However, bone analyses have produced genetic profiles that have no match among modern Europeans.

"These early settlements appear to have been created by groups of early modern humans who did not survive to pass on their genes. They are our species' lost lineages. The crucial point is that the demise of these early modern human settlers meant Neanderthals still occupied Europe for a further few thousand years before Homo sapiens eventually took over the continent," said Professor Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum, London.

Modern humans first appeared in Africa around 200,000 years ago and slowly evolved across the continent before moving into western Asia around 60,000 years ago. Our ancestors then spread across the globe until every other species of hominin on the planet had been rendered extinct, including the Denisovans of East Asia and Homo floresiensis, the "hobbit folk" of Indonesia.

Neanderthals in Europe were one of the last hominin species to succumb, dying out around 39,000 years ago. However, recent studies – outlined at a meeting of the European Society for the study of Human Evolution earlier this year – have shown that this takeover by Homo sapiens was not straightforward. On several occasions, groups of early settlers perished as they moved into the continent.

In one study, international researchers re-examined a partial skull and skeleton of a woman found in the Zlatý Kůň cave in the Czech Republic. Originally thought to have been 15,000 years old, this new analysis indicated it was probably at least 45,000 years old, making her one of the oldest members of Homo sapiens found in Europe. However, the study also found she shared no genetic continuity with modern Europeans.



A New York Oasis Lies in Path of City's Push to Build Housing

 Elizabeth Street Garden, Manhattan, August 27, 2024. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs Purchase Licensing Rights
Elizabeth Street Garden, Manhattan, August 27, 2024. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs Purchase Licensing Rights
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A New York Oasis Lies in Path of City's Push to Build Housing

 Elizabeth Street Garden, Manhattan, August 27, 2024. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs Purchase Licensing Rights
Elizabeth Street Garden, Manhattan, August 27, 2024. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs Purchase Licensing Rights

A beloved public garden in lower Manhattan may soon become a casualty of New York's push to develop more housing despite opposition led by celebrities such as Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese.

Elizabeth Street Garden, built by an antiques gallery owner on land leased from the city in 1991, is an urban oasis in the densely crowded Little Italy neighborhood, the backdrop for "Mean Streets," Scorsese's classic New York movie starring De Niro.

In 2013, the city proposed a 123-unit affordable housing project for seniors on the one-acre (0.4 hectare) plot. Opponents have proposed alternative sites nearby that could create 700 units, but housing officials remain unconvinced. Legal options are running out to stop the garden's eviction after the lease expires on Sept. 10, Reuters reported. p

Thousands of people, including Scorsese, De Niro and another downtown luminary, poet and musician Patti Smith, have written letters asking Mayor Eric Adams to preserve the garden.

"I support increasing the availability of affordable housing," wrote De Niro, "but I'm also passionate about preserving the character of our neighborhoods."

The controversy is just one example of the tensions that have surfaced as New York strives to build more homes in one of the country's most populous and expensive housing markets.

Its vacancy rate dropped to 1.4% in February, the lowest since 1968, according to the city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development.

- 'CITY OF YES'

In 2022, Adams unveiled a three-pronged plan called City of Yes to update zoning regulations for new development. The final portion, which the city council is expected to vote on this year, is designed to "build a little more housing in every neighborhood," said Adams. This includes converting underused office buildings and allowing apartments above businesses in low-density commercial areas.

Much of the opposition has come from low-density neighborhoods in New York's boroughs outside of Manhattan.

"I think it's fear - fear of change," said Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, who provided conditional support for City of Yes last week. Only in Staten Island, the most suburban of the five boroughs, did the borough president issue an unfavorable recommendation.

Critics fear zoning changes will overcrowd their neighborhoods, making them like Manhattan.

One controversial aspect allows homeowners to convert basements, garages and backyard cottages into rental apartments. Another proposal would eliminate mandates to provide parking for new development, angering residents of car-dependent areas.

Richards called City of Yes a modest proposal that would not significantly alter low-density neighborhoods, but acknowledged the need for more affordable housing and parking in areas with little public transit.

Paul Graziano, an urban planner who lives on a suburban block in Queens, called City of Yes "apocalyptic." The plan's ultimate goal, he said, is to transform areas with mostly owner-occupied single-family homes into neighborhoods dominated by market-rate or luxury apartments.

"If you build it, they will come, right?" said Graziano. "If you enable it, it's going to happen. This is what happens in the city of New York."

Quality of life is the bottom line for many in New York City, where low-density neighborhoods feel increasingly squeezed, as in Queens, or where green spaces are especially rare, as in lower Manhattan.

"There's nothing like Elizabeth Street Garden in the city, and the city will never build anything like it again," said Joseph Reiver, who took over the space from his late father. "They're never going to tear down buildings to build gardens."