Photo Credit: Unplash/Jeremy Bishop
Early humans might have settled within a cave on the Mediterranean island of Mallorca, a group of researchers have found. The discovery was made because of the identification of an ancient submerged bridge, which is said to have been constructed roughly 6,000 years ago. This discovery revises the previously accepted timeline of human settlement on the island, suggesting that the region was inhabited much earlier than previously believed. In 2000, researchers discovered the 25-foot-long (7.6 meters) bridge during a scuba-diving expedition in a flooded cave.
The bridge, constructed from large limestone blocks, was initially thought to be about 4,400 years old based on pottery fragments found within the cave. However, a recent analysis led by Professor Bogdan Onac, a geology professor at the University of South Florida, has shown that this estimate was inaccurate.
To ascertain the bridge's true age, the research team analysed a distinct light-coloured band on the bridge's upper section, formed by calcite encrustations. These deposits, known as speleothems, revealed sea-level changes over time. By studying these mineral deposits, the researchers concluded that the bridge was constructed around 6,000 years ago, pushing back the timeline of human habitation on the island by 1,600 years.
This discovery is significant because it suggests that humans were present on Mallorca much earlier than previously thought. The popular belief in the scientific community is that the island, unlike other Mediterranean islands like Cyprus and Crete, was one of the last to be settled.
The researchers believe further investigation is needed to understand why Mallorca was inhabited later than other islands in the region, suggesting that the island may have lacked essential resources, such as farmable land, necessary for sustaining early human populations.
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