Objective: getting to know life better 60,000 years ago
Archaeologists from all over the world are at work on the Abric Romaní site hoping to find remains of animals, hearths and tools
Archaeologists from all over the world are at work on the Abric Romaní site hoping to find remains of animals, hearths and tools
University researchers from all over the world excavate together in the Abric Romaní in Catalonia in this 35th campaign
The archaeological site known as Abric Romaní is currently being excavated for the 31st year in order to continue documenting and understanding how Neanderthals lived and organised communities in the north-eastern Iberian Peninsula. The archaeologist, palaeontologist and Director of excavations, Eudald Carbonell, has explained to the CNA that this campaign will be “very interesting” as the dig will be in the level corresponding to the time when the Neanderthals lived “their maximum expansion period”. Carbonell, who is one of the directors of Atapuerca site (where the Homo Antecessor was discovered), leads a team of 20 including research staff and doctoral students. The site is located some 50 kilometres west of Barcelona city and is open for the public to visit.