Nature | Vol 577 | 16 January 2020 | 383
2178
75 ka
2146
100–160 ka Boulders of local marl
2269
90–100 ka
2008–2010 excavations west of reserve
Excavation unit H09a to H09c
Excavation unit G09a
2008–2010 excavations east of reserve
1056
75–89 ka
1042
61-65 ka
3.0 m
4.0 m
2.0 m
R e s e r v e
Main^
road
A
XI
IX
VIII
VII
VI
V
IV IIIII
I
IND7
87 ± 7 ka
1163
134 ± 14 ka
2319
100–120 ka
2330
90–110 ka
2331
90–110 ka
0 2 m
Excavation units F10c and G10a
Excavation unit H10a
2284
100-140 ka
2404
120–220 ka
Excavation unit G10c
2190
85–110 ka120–160 ka^2388
36 m
Unexcavated
3.0 m
2.0 m
1.0 m
0 m
4 m
IND1
117 ± 5 ka
IND4 106 ± 8 ka
IND18
123 ± 8 ka
IND19
115 ± 9 ka
Unexcavated
Excavation unit L10c
2476
80–100 ka
2481
60–90 ka
100–120 ka
2291
120 ± 13 ka
1038
2569
118 ± 17 ka
Brecciated siltstone clasts
0 2 m
H. erectus nds
Unexcavated
Terrace deposits
Excavated
Excavations
Topography CI: 50 cm
1931–
1933
2008,
2010
I
25 m
IND15 102 ± 8 ka
IND5 123 ± 9 ka
2286
120–130 ka
Plan view
C
K
L
Specimens dated with U-series
Facies A: marl pebbles, cobbles and boulders
Facies D: medium-grained, moderately well-sorted sand with shallow
trough cross-bedding
Facies B: well-sorted, medium- to ne-grained sand with planar bedding
Facies C: crudely bedded, poorly sorted, pebbly, muddy sand
with skeletal fossils
Facies E: muddy, matrix-supported diamicton with brecciated siltstone
clasts (with symbol used below)
Specimens dated with ESR/U-series
Samples dated with pIR-IRSL
Disturbed soil and backll from previous excavations
Kalibeng marl bedrock
107 ± 8 ka
IND12
113 ± 9 ka
IND11
Fig. 2 | Cross-sections of Ngandong site, showing the stratigraphic context
and the location of our dating samples. Depositional facies A–E, exposed in
excavation bulkheads with collection points for pIR-IRSL samples (IND codes),
US–ESR specimens and U-series diffusion–absorption–decay specimens (four-
digit specimen numbers) (Supplementary Tables 6, 9, 10). Dated fossils not
shown in the figure are 1026 and 1110 from excavation pit C (C on the plan-view
map); 1075, 1076 and 1095 from pit L (L); and 1088 from pit K (K). Distances
between pits east of the reserve are indicated on the grey dashed columns. The
facies are present on the west and east sides of the archaeological reserve, but
in different relative abundances. The Ngandong bone bed in facies C was
generally excavated away in 1931–1933, but the underlying bone bed in facies A
appears to be widely present at the site. The Ngandong H. erectus finds are
labelled on the plan view map, following a previous publication^3. I–XI represent
the calvaria, and A represents one of the tibiae. Facies A is commonly one or two
marl-cobbles thick, but also forms thicker bars. Facies B is moderately well-
sorted, fine- to medium-grained sand with shallow-trough and ripple cross-
laminations. Facies C is very coarse-grained, very poorly sorted, crudely cross-
bedded and partially carbonate-cemented sand and pebbly granule
conglomerate. Facies D is moderately well-sorted, medium- to coarse-grained,
trough cross-bedded sand. Facies E is sandy gravelly muddy diamicton, which
fills channels cut into facies B–D (and into which the bedding inclines).
Extended Data Figure 6 and Supplementary Information section 3 provide
additional lithological information. Scale bars apply to vertical and horizontal
distances. CI, contour interval.