Ternifine

anthropological and archaeological site, Algeria
External Websites
Also known as: Tighenif
Also called:
Tighenif
Related Topics:
archaeology
Homo erectus
paleoanthropology
Related Places:
Algeria
Mascara

Ternifine, site of paleoanthropological excavations located about 20 km (12 miles) east of Mascara, Algeria, known for its remains of Homo erectus. Ternifine was quarried for sand in the 19th century, and numerous fossilized animal bones and stone artifacts were recovered. Realizing the potential significance of these finds, paleontologists carried out systematic excavations in 1954–55. Their efforts produced much additional material, including three human mandibles (jawbones). Digging was stopped because of flooding, but subsequent lowering of the water table permitted detailed studies of the sediment layers. The Ternifine deposits consist of layers of hard grayish clays and sands of a small lake or swamp. The surrounding environment of this area was probably treeless and rather arid, as inferred from the types of animals present. The fossils of those animals along with geologic evidence date Ternifine to about 700,000 years ago.

The first mandible, found in 1954, is mostly complete, although its rami (ascending portions) are damaged on both sides. The jaw is heavy, and at the front the profile is smooth and receding. There is no sign of a chin. The teeth are very large by modern standards. The second specimen consists of the left half of a mandible, while the third is virtually intact. The latter is the largest of the Ternifine individuals. The development of bony ridges present on the body and along the base of the jaw, along with other features, suggests that this individual is male. One of the smaller mandibles is likely to be female. In addition to the mandibles, a hominin parietal bone (the side wall of the cranium) was recovered, as were some isolated teeth. This material was compared with the remains of other archaic humans, and resemblances to Peking man were observed. Initially the Ternifine group was considered sufficiently different to justify a new genus and species (Atlanthropus mauritanicus). However, later it was recognized that the fossils from Algeria and China, along with similar specimens from Java, could all be classified together in one species, which is now called Homo erectus. The hominins at Ternifine were found with stone tools of the Acheulean industry. Some other populations of H. erectus in Africa are known to have manufactured Acheulean implements, but approximately contemporary representatives of this species in China produced chopping tools comparable to those of the earlier Oldowan industry.

Latin:
“upright man”
Related Topics:
Java man
Peking man
Solo man
Lantian man
Sinanthropus

Homo erectus, extinct species of the human genus (Homo), perhaps an ancestor of modern humans (Homo sapiens). H. erectus most likely originated in Africa, though Eurasia cannot be ruled out. Regardless of where it first evolved, the species seems to have dispersed quickly, starting about 1.9 million years ago (mya) near the middle of the Pleistocene Epoch, moving through the African tropics, Europe, South Asia, and Southeast Asia. This history has been recorded directly if imprecisely by many sites that have yielded fossil remains of H. erectus. At other localities, broken animal bones and stone tools have indicated the presence of the species, though there are no traces of the people themselves. H. erectus was a human of medium stature that walked upright. The braincase was low, the forehead was receded, and the nose, jaws, and palate were wide. The brain was smaller and the teeth larger than in modern humans. H. erectus appears to have been the first human species to control fire, some 1,000,000 years ago. The species seems to have flourished until some 200,000 years ago (200 kya) or perhaps later before giving way to other humans including Homo sapiens.