Ancient humans waited out last ice age in frigid Central Europe, surprising study finds

Most animals retreated to small, warmer enclaves. But some, like humans, seemed to have stayed where they were.

A recreation of an ancient human wearing furs and holding a torch walking into a cave
(Image credit: Gorodenkoff via Shutterstock)

Humans seem to have been adapted to the last ice age in similar ways to wolves and bears, according to our recent study, challenging longstanding theories about how and where our ancestors lived during this glacial period.

Previous studies have supported the view of most archaeologists that modern humans retreated into southern Europe during the height of the last ice age and expanded during the later increase in global temperatures. But our study is the first to use genetic data to show that at least some humans stayed in central Europe, unlike many other animals and despite our species having evolved in the much warmer climate of Africa.

John Stewart
Professor of Evolutionary Palaeoecology, Bournemouth University

John Stewart is an evolutionary palaeoecologist with broad research interests encompassing the use of faunas in reconstructing Pleistocene and Holocene ecologies, understanding the nature, timing and location of ice age refugia for species, and building and testing molecular biogeographical hypotheses on how species respond to environmental change. He is also interested in the relationship between species and subspecies level evolution and extinction during the Quaternary; and more recently the use of Quaternary data in conservation biology.