Chagyrskaya Cave sits in the wind-scoured foothills of the Altai Mountains (Krasnoshchyokovsky District, Altai Krai, Russia). The archaeological sequence preserves Neanderthal remains and stone tool assemblages embedded in layers that radiometric and stratigraphic studies place within a broad window from roughly 98,050 to 48,150 BCE. This span embraces dramatic climatic swings of the Late Pleistocene when Neanderthal populations across Eurasia adapted to shrinking refugia and shifting resources.
The material culture at Chagyrskaya shows a blend of classic Middle Paleolithic Levallois reduction alongside local technological choices — an echo of wide-ranging Neanderthal traditions interacting with the unique environmental niche of the Altai. Archaeological data indicate episodic occupation: hearth features, butchered fauna, and curated tools suggest repeated, seasonal use rather than continuous settlement.
Limited evidence suggests these Neanderthals were part of a regional lineage distinct in certain morphological and cultural traits, but the deep time range and small number of securely dated specimens mean models of origin and movement must remain cautious. Ongoing stratigraphic work and additional samples are essential to refine the picture of how Chagyrskaya groups fit into Neanderthal population dynamics across Eurasia.