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The skull found in Petralona Cave in 1960 |
The skull found in Petralona Cave in 1960 is featured on the 50d Greek
stamp, March 1982, and is one of a set of six. It is a fossil hominid
cranium. Apparently the skull was adhering to a rock through a
stalagmite column, while the skeleton of the same individual was buried
under a stalagmite cover approximately 5 cm thick. The skeleton had been
separated from the skull during a dry period apparently; the soil,
having shrunk, moved the skeleton, while the skull remained attached by
stalagmites about 20-24 cm above the skeleton.
The skull belonged to a human who died there before the formation of the
travertine layer. Samples from the stalagmite cover of the rock to which
the skull adhered and from the travertine layer covering the skeleton
have been Electron Spin Resonance dated and shown to be 670,000 years BP
and 340,000 years BP. The same stalagmite dated different ways give ages
of 440,000 and even 200.000 years, the latter possibly being the most
accurate.
The skull was well preserved due to being covered a relatively short
time after death by a brown calcite layer over pale whitish stal
encrustation. Unfortunately the skeleton itself was not preserved and
has been lost forever. |