Kvabebi fossil site
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| Location | Mount Kvabebi, Iori Plateau |
|---|---|
| Region | Sighnaghi Municipality, Georgia |
| Coordinates | 41°27′28.5″N 45°42′43.4″E / 41.457917°N 45.712056°E |
| Type | Paleontological |
| History | |
| Periods | Miocene |
The Kvabebi fossil site (Georgian: ქვაბების ფაუნა) is a Pliocene paleontological locality in eastern Georgia's Iori Plateau, known for its rich vertebrate assemblage that is key to understanding of Eurasian biogeography and early human dispersal. Dated to around 3.07 million years ago (Ma), it preserves a mix of Eurasian taxa and Miocene relicts from the Greek-Iranian province — a Late Miocene Eurasian biome hosting extinct savanna species. Research since 2009 has refuted earlier hypotheses that Kvabebi represented an "African bridge" for early hominin dispersal, instead revealing it as a dead-end refuge for ancient lineages.
Located at Mount Kvabebi on the southern edge of Georgia's Iori Plateau near the Magharo village, Signaghi Municipality, the Kvabebi fossil site was discovered in 1962 when geologist G. Avakov unearthed a lone vertebra. Between the 1960s and 1970s, the Georgian Academy of Sciences expeditions recovered over 800 vertebrate specimens from the Kura Basin's layered sediments — a trove later cataloged in A. Vekua's 1972 monograph. Renewed fieldwork in the 2000s by Georgian-Spanish teams reinterpreted the site with implications for understanding continental biogeography.[1]
Geological setting
At the base of Kvabebi's 170-meter-thick exposure lie marine mudstones studded with Caspian Sea mollusks like Avimactra and Cardium — relics of a time when the Paratethys Ocean flooded the region. Higher strata transition to continental sandstones, where two volcanic ash layers bracket the fossil bed at 40 meters depth. Here, disarticulated bones weathered by ancient rivers lie preserved, untouched by scavengers.[1]
Paleomagnetic analysis pinned these fossils to reverse Chron C2An.1r, dating them to around 3.07 million years ago. This places Kvabebi contemporaneous with Ethiopia's Hadar Formation and older than Europe's last Hipparion horse sites. Critical biochronological markers like the three-toed horse Hipparion rocinantis and early deer Eucladoceros confirm Kvabebi's role as a pre-Equus ecosystem.[1]