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Neanderthal behavior

Almost everything about Neanderthal behaviour remains controversial. From their physiology, Neanderthals are presumed to have been omnivores, but animal protein formed the majority of their dietary protein, showing them to have been carnivorous apex predators and not scavengers.[1] Although very little is known of their social organization, it appears patrilines would make up the nucleus of the tribe, and women would seek out partners in neighbouring tribes once reaching adolescence, presumably to avoid inbreeding.[2] An analysis based on finger-length ratios suggests that Neanderthals were more sexually competitive and promiscuous than modern-day humans.[3]

A Mousterian tool retoucher on a bone-shaft from the French site of La Quina, used to modify stone tools.

The quality of stone tools at archaeological sites suggests Neanderthals were good at "expert" cognition, a form of observational learning and practice – acquired through apprenticeship – that relies heavily on long-term procedural memory.[4] Neanderthal toolmaking changed little over hundreds of thousands of years. The lack of innovation may imply a reduced capacity for thinking by analogy and less working memory. Researchers have speculated that Neanderthal behaviour would probably seem neophobic, dogmatic and xenophobic to modern humans,[4][5] but nevertheless having a considerable degree of rationality.[6] There is genetic evidence that supports interbreeding with Homo sapiens, language capability (including the FOXP2 gene), archaeological signs of cultural development and potential for cumulative cultural evolution.[7] Few Neanderthals lived past the age of 35.[8]

Language edit

 
The hyoid bone and larynx in a modern human.

It is not known whether Neanderthals were anatomically capable of speech and whether they spoke.[9] The only bone in the vocal tract is the hyoid, but it is so fragile that no Neanderthal hyoid was found until 1983, when excavators discovered a well-preserved one on Neanderthal Kebara 2, Israel. It was largely similar to that of living humans. Although the original excavators claimed that the similarity of this bone with that of living humans implied Neanderthals were anatomically capable of speech,[10] it is not possible to reconstruct the vocal tract with information supplied by the hyoid.[11][12][13][14] In particular, it does not allow to determine if the larynx of its owner was in a low-lying position, a feature considered important in producing speech.[15][16]

A 2013 study on the Kebara hyoid used X-ray microtomography and finite element analysis to conclude that the Neanderthal hyoid showed microscopic features more similar to a modern human's hyoid than to a chimpanzee hyoid. To the authors, that suggested the Neanderthal hyoid was used similarly to that in living humans, that is, to produce speech.[17] Because the authors did not compare the microscopic structure of the Kebara 2 hyoid with that of speech-hindered living humans, the result is not yet conclusive.[citation needed]

Although some researchers think Neanderthal tool-making is too complex for them not to have had language,[18] tool-making experiments of Levallois technology, the most common Neanderthal toolmaking technique, have found that living humans can learn it in silence.[19]

Neanderthals had the same DNA-coding region of the FOXP2 gene as living humans, but are different in one position of the gene's regulatory regions,[20] and the extent of FOXP2 expression might hence have been different in Neanderthals.[21] Although the gene appears necessary for language, it is not sufficient.[22] It is not known whether FOXP2 evolved for or in conjunction with language, nor whether there are other language-related genes that Neanderthals may or may not have had. Similarly, the size and functionality of the Neanderthal Broca's and Wernicke's areas, used for speech generation in modern humans, is debated.

In 1998, researchers suggested Neanderthals had a hypoglossal canal at least as large as humans, suggesting they had part of the neurological requirements for language. The canal carries the hypoglossal nerve, which controls the muscles of the tongue, necessary to produce language.[23] However, a Berkeley research team showed no correlation between canal size and speech, as several extant non-human primates and fossilized australopithecines have larger hypoglossal canals.[24]

The morphology of the outer and middle ear of Homo heidelbergensis, the Neanderthal's ancestor, suggests they had an auditory sensitivity similar to modern humans and different from chimpanzees.[25]

Tools edit

Neanderthal and early anatomically modern human archaeological sites show a simpler toolkit than those found in Upper Paleolithic sites, produced by modern humans after about 50,000 BP. In both early anatomically modern humans and Neanderthals, there is little innovation in the technology. In 2020 a 50,000-year-old three-ply cord fragment made from bark was found at the Abri du Maras, France site. Bruce Hardy of Kenyon College, Ohio, concluded that the creation of the cord suggested a cognitive understanding of numeracy and context-sensitive operational memory.[26]

Tools produced by Middle Palaeolithic humans in Eurasia (both Neanderthals and early modern humans) are known as Mousterian. These were often produced using soft hammer percussion, with hammers made of materials like bones, antlers, and wood, rather than hard hammer percussion, using stone hammers. A result of this is that their bone industry was relatively simple. They routinely made stone implements. Neanderthal tools consisted of stone flakes and task-specific hand axes, many of which were sharp.

There is evidence of violence among Neanderthals. The 40,000-year-old Neanderthal skull of St. Césaire has a healed fracture in its cranial vault likely caused by something sharp, suggesting interpersonal violence. The wound healed and the Neanderthal survived.[27]

Whether they had projectile weapons is controversial. They seem to have had wooden spears, but it is unclear whether they were used as projectiles or as thrusting spears.[28] Wood implements rarely survive,[29] but several 320,000-year-old wooden spears about 2 metres in length were found near Schöningen, northern Germany, and are thought to be the product of the older Homo heidelbergensis species.

Neanderthals used fire on occasion, but it is not certain whether they were able to produce it. They may have used pyrolusite (manganese dioxide) to accelerate the combustion of wood. "With archaeological evidence for fireplaces and the conversion of the manganese dioxide to powder, [it has been argued] that Neanderthals at Pech-de-l’Azé I used manganese dioxide in fire-making and produced fire on demand." MnO2 lowers the combustion temperature of wood from 350 degrees Celsius to 250 degrees Celsius and is common in Neanderthal archaeological sites.[30]

Neanderthals produced birch tar through the dry distillation of birch bark.[31][32] It was long thought that birch tar made by Neanderthals required them to follow a complex recipe and that it thus showed complex cognitive skills (to arrive at this recipe) and cultural transmission (of this recipe). A study from 2019 showed that birch tar production can instead be a very simple process - merely involving the burning of birch bark near smooth vertical surfaces in open-air conditions.[33]

Pendants and other jewellery showing traces of ochre dye and deliberate grooving have also been found in one single stratigraphically disturbed Neanderthal archaeological layer,[34] but whether these items were ever in the hands of Neanderthals or were mixed into their archaeological layers from overlying modern human ones is debated.

Burial claims edit

 
A claimed Neanderthal burial at Kebara Cave (Carmel Range, Israel). Thermoluminescence dates place Neanderthal levels at Kebara at ca. 60,000 BP. Skeleton of an adult man nicknamed Moshe (25–35 years old, height 1.70 m) found in 1983

No claim of a deliberate Neanderthal burial is universally accepted.[35][36][37] An interpretation of pre-Neanderthal Shanidar IV as having been ritually buried with flowers[38] was seriously questioned in the past,[39] and to Paul B. Pettitt, convincingly eliminated: "A recent examination of the microfauna from the strata into which the grave was cut suggests that the pollen was deposited by the burrowing rodent Meriones tersicus (Persian jird), which is common in the Shanidar microfauna and whose burrowing activity can be observed today".[40]

However, further excavations of the site which began in 2014 led to new discoveries and multiple lines of evidence that the Neanderthal was deliberately buried, including the fact that the sediment layer around the body is visibly different to the layer below. Additionally, the sediment below the body shows signs of having been disturbed by digging. According to Emma Pomeroy of the University of Cambridge, “That’s quite good evidence that something was dug out and that’s what the body’s been put in.”[41]

Diet edit

Neanderthals obtained protein in their diet from animal sources.[42] Evidence-based isotope studies show that Neanderthals ate primarily meat.[43][44][45] Neanderthals were probably apex predators,[46] and fed predominantly on deer, namely red deer and reindeer, as they were the most abundant game,[47] but also on ibex, wild boar, aurochs, and less frequently mammoth, straight-tusked elephant and woolly rhinoceros.[48][49][50]

Traces of fossilized plants have been extracted from Neanderthal teeth tartar found in Belgium and Iraq, suggesting they also consumed plants.[51][52][53]

Burned food remnants, thought to be about 70,000 years old, were found in the Shanidar Caves, 500 miles north of Baghdad. Dr Ceren Kabukcu, an archaeobotanist at the University of Liverpool said, 'We present evidence for the first time of soaking and pounding pulse seeds by both Neanderthals and early modern humans.'[54]

Cannibalism edit

Neanderthals are thought to have practised cannibalism or ritual defleshing. This hypothesis was formulated after researchers found marks on Neanderthal bones similar to the bones of a dead deer butchered by Neanderthals.[55][56]

Neanderthal bones from various sites (Combe-Grenal and Abri Moula in France, Krapina in Croatia and Grotta Guattari in Italy) have all been cited as bearing cut marks made by stone tools.[57] However, the results of technological tests have revealed varied causes.

Re-evaluation of these marks using high-powered microscopes, comparisons to contemporary butchered animal remains, and recent ethnographic cases of excarnation mortuary practises have shown that perhaps this was a case of ritual defleshing.

  • At Grotta Guattari, the purposefully widened base of the skull (for access to the brain) is caused by carnivore action, with hyena tooth marks found on the skull and mandible.[citation needed]
  • According to some studies[which?], fragments of bones from Krapina show marks similar to those on bones from secondary burials at a Michigan ossuary (14th century AD), and are indicative of removing the flesh of a partially decomposed body.
  • According to others, the marks on the bones found at Krapina are indicative of defleshing, although whether this was for nutritional or ritual purposes cannot be determined with certainty.[58]

Evidence of cannibalism includes:

  • Analysis of bones from Abri Moula in France does seem to suggest cannibalism was practised here. Cut-marks are concentrated in places expected in the case of butchery, instead of defleshing. Additionally, the treatment of the bones was similar to that of roe deer bones, assumed to be food remains, found in the same shelter.[59]
  • At El Sidron in Northern Spain, scientists have found evidence pointing to the cannibalism of 12 individuals by what is hypothesized to have been a neighbouring group of Neanderthals. According to Carles Lalueza-Fox of the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona, the individuals (three children aged from two to nine, three teenagers, and six adults) appear to have been "killed and eaten, with their bones and skulls split open to extract the marrow, tongue and brains." Scientists speculate that the lack of any evidence of fire makes it likely that the event happened in winter, during times when food was scarce.[60]

Evidence indicating cannibalism would not distinguish Neanderthals from modern humans, which are known to have practised both cannibalism and mortuary defleshing (e.g., the sky burial of Tibet).

Claims of art and adornment edit

 
Proposed Neanderthal jewelry: white-tailed eagle claw with striations at the Neanderthal site of Krapina, Croatia, circa 130,000 BP.[61]

A large number of claims of Neanderthal art, adornment, and structures have been made, which would show Neanderthals were capable of symbolic thought and a degree of human rationality.[62][63][64][65] However, none of them are widely accepted as evidence of symbolism,[66] as the dating often interlaps with anatomically modern human presence in Europe.[67][68] Some notable findings are listed below.

  • Flower pollen on the body of pre-Neanderthal Shanidar 4, Iraq, had in 1975 been argued to be a flower burial,[69] but the pollen could have also been deposited by natural events.[70][71]
  • In 1975, a piece of flat flint with a piece of bone pushed through a hole on the midsection–dating to 32, 40, or 75 kya[72]–has been purported to resemble the upper half of a face, with the bone representing eyes–the Mask of la Roche-Cotard.[73][74] It is contested whether it represents a face, or if it even constitutes art.[75]
  • Châtelperronian beads have been attributed to Neanderthals, but the dating is uncertain and the beads may have been made by modern humans.[76][77][78][79]
  • Bird bones were argued to show evidence for feather plucking in a 2012 study examining 1,699 ancient sites across Eurasia, which the authors controversially took to mean Neanderthals wore bird feathers as personal adornments.[80][81]
 
The scratched floor of Gorham's Cave
  • Deep scratches on the floor of Gorham's Cave, Gibraltar, were dated to older than 39 kya in 2012, which some have controversially interpreted as Neanderthal abstract art.[82][83][84][85]
  • In 2015, a study argued that several 130,000-year-old eagle talons found in a cache near Krapina, Croatia along with Neanderthal bones, had been modified to be used as jewellery.[61][86] A similar talon necklace was reported in 2019 at Cova Foradà in Spain.[87][88]
  • Two artificial 176,000-year-old stalagmite ring structures several metres wide, more than 300 m (980 ft) from the entrance within Bruniquel Cave, France, were reported in 2016. Being so far inside the cave also shows the use of artificial lighting in underground environments.[89] Other red-painted stalagmites in Spain were dated to 65,500 years ago.[90]
  • In 2017, incision-decorated raven bones from the Zaskalnaya VI (Kolosovskaya) Neanderthal site, Crimea, Micoquian industry dated to 43–38 kya were reported. Given there are 17 of these objects at seven different sites in the area, and the notches on all of them are more or less equidistant to each other, they are very unlikely to have originated from simple butchering.[91]
  • In 2018, red-painted symbols comprising hand stencils, a ladder-shaped figure,[90] dots, discs, lines, and representations of animals on the cave walls of several caves across Spain 700 km (430 mi) apart, including La Pasiega,[90][92] Cave of Maltravieso,[90] Cave of El Castillo,[93] and Doña Trinidad–were dated to be older than 66,000 years ago.[90] If the dating is correct, they were painted at least 20,000 years before the arrival of anatomically modern humans in western Europe, and demonstrate Neanderthals were capable of symbolic behaviour.[90][67][68][94]
  • The Cave of Los Aviones in Spain has yielded ochred and perforated marine shells, red and yellow colourants, and shell "makeup containers"[95] that feature residues of complex pigment mixtures.[96] The pigments on the seashells were dated to 115,000 years old, making these "the oldest personal ornamentation known anywhere in the world," predating the presence of Homo sapiens.[97][96][98][99]
  • In 2023 markings found in a cave in La Roche-Cotard were identified as the oldest known Neanderthal engravings and have been dated to more than 57,000 years ago, before modern humans arrived in the region. [100][101]

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External links edit

neanderthal, behavior, almost, everything, about, neanderthal, behaviour, remains, controversial, from, their, physiology, neanderthals, presumed, have, been, omnivores, animal, protein, formed, majority, their, dietary, protein, showing, them, have, been, car. Almost everything about Neanderthal behaviour remains controversial From their physiology Neanderthals are presumed to have been omnivores but animal protein formed the majority of their dietary protein showing them to have been carnivorous apex predators and not scavengers 1 Although very little is known of their social organization it appears patrilines would make up the nucleus of the tribe and women would seek out partners in neighbouring tribes once reaching adolescence presumably to avoid inbreeding 2 An analysis based on finger length ratios suggests that Neanderthals were more sexually competitive and promiscuous than modern day humans 3 A Mousterian tool retoucher on a bone shaft from the French site of La Quina used to modify stone tools The quality of stone tools at archaeological sites suggests Neanderthals were good at expert cognition a form of observational learning and practice acquired through apprenticeship that relies heavily on long term procedural memory 4 Neanderthal toolmaking changed little over hundreds of thousands of years The lack of innovation may imply a reduced capacity for thinking by analogy and less working memory Researchers have speculated that Neanderthal behaviour would probably seem neophobic dogmatic and xenophobic to modern humans 4 5 but nevertheless having a considerable degree of rationality 6 There is genetic evidence that supports interbreeding with Homo sapiens language capability including the FOXP2 gene archaeological signs of cultural development and potential for cumulative cultural evolution 7 Few Neanderthals lived past the age of 35 8 Contents 1 Language 2 Tools 3 Burial claims 4 Diet 4 1 Cannibalism 5 Claims of art and adornment 6 References 7 External linksLanguage editSee also Origin of language nbsp The hyoid bone and larynx in a modern human It is not known whether Neanderthals were anatomically capable of speech and whether they spoke 9 The only bone in the vocal tract is the hyoid but it is so fragile that no Neanderthal hyoid was found until 1983 when excavators discovered a well preserved one on Neanderthal Kebara 2 Israel It was largely similar to that of living humans Although the original excavators claimed that the similarity of this bone with that of living humans implied Neanderthals were anatomically capable of speech 10 it is not possible to reconstruct the vocal tract with information supplied by the hyoid 11 12 13 14 In particular it does not allow to determine if the larynx of its owner was in a low lying position a feature considered important in producing speech 15 16 A 2013 study on the Kebara hyoid used X ray microtomography and finite element analysis to conclude that the Neanderthal hyoid showed microscopic features more similar to a modern human s hyoid than to a chimpanzee hyoid To the authors that suggested the Neanderthal hyoid was used similarly to that in living humans that is to produce speech 17 Because the authors did not compare the microscopic structure of the Kebara 2 hyoid with that of speech hindered living humans the result is not yet conclusive citation needed Although some researchers think Neanderthal tool making is too complex for them not to have had language 18 tool making experiments of Levallois technology the most common Neanderthal toolmaking technique have found that living humans can learn it in silence 19 Neanderthals had the same DNA coding region of the FOXP2 gene as living humans but are different in one position of the gene s regulatory regions 20 and the extent of FOXP2 expression might hence have been different in Neanderthals 21 Although the gene appears necessary for language it is not sufficient 22 It is not known whether FOXP2 evolved for or in conjunction with language nor whether there are other language related genes that Neanderthals may or may not have had Similarly the size and functionality of the Neanderthal Broca s and Wernicke s areas used for speech generation in modern humans is debated In 1998 researchers suggested Neanderthals had a hypoglossal canal at least as large as humans suggesting they had part of the neurological requirements for language The canal carries the hypoglossal nerve which controls the muscles of the tongue necessary to produce language 23 However a Berkeley research team showed no correlation between canal size and speech as several extant non human primates and fossilized australopithecines have larger hypoglossal canals 24 The morphology of the outer and middle ear of Homo heidelbergensis the Neanderthal s ancestor suggests they had an auditory sensitivity similar to modern humans and different from chimpanzees 25 Tools editNeanderthal and early anatomically modern human archaeological sites show a simpler toolkit than those found in Upper Paleolithic sites produced by modern humans after about 50 000 BP In both early anatomically modern humans and Neanderthals there is little innovation in the technology In 2020 a 50 000 year old three ply cord fragment made from bark was found at the Abri du Maras France site Bruce Hardy of Kenyon College Ohio concluded that the creation of the cord suggested a cognitive understanding of numeracy and context sensitive operational memory 26 Tools produced by Middle Palaeolithic humans in Eurasia both Neanderthals and early modern humans are known as Mousterian These were often produced using soft hammer percussion with hammers made of materials like bones antlers and wood rather than hard hammer percussion using stone hammers A result of this is that their bone industry was relatively simple They routinely made stone implements Neanderthal tools consisted of stone flakes and task specific hand axes many of which were sharp There is evidence of violence among Neanderthals The 40 000 year old Neanderthal skull of St Cesaire has a healed fracture in its cranial vault likely caused by something sharp suggesting interpersonal violence The wound healed and the Neanderthal survived 27 Whether they had projectile weapons is controversial They seem to have had wooden spears but it is unclear whether they were used as projectiles or as thrusting spears 28 Wood implements rarely survive 29 but several 320 000 year old wooden spears about 2 metres in length were found near Schoningen northern Germany and are thought to be the product of the older Homo heidelbergensis species Neanderthals used fire on occasion but it is not certain whether they were able to produce it They may have used pyrolusite manganese dioxide to accelerate the combustion of wood With archaeological evidence for fireplaces and the conversion of the manganese dioxide to powder it has been argued that Neanderthals at Pech de l Aze I used manganese dioxide in fire making and produced fire on demand MnO2 lowers the combustion temperature of wood from 350 degrees Celsius to 250 degrees Celsius and is common in Neanderthal archaeological sites 30 Neanderthals produced birch tar through the dry distillation of birch bark 31 32 It was long thought that birch tar made by Neanderthals required them to follow a complex recipe and that it thus showed complex cognitive skills to arrive at this recipe and cultural transmission of this recipe A study from 2019 showed that birch tar production can instead be a very simple process merely involving the burning of birch bark near smooth vertical surfaces in open air conditions 33 Pendants and other jewellery showing traces of ochre dye and deliberate grooving have also been found in one single stratigraphically disturbed Neanderthal archaeological layer 34 but whether these items were ever in the hands of Neanderthals or were mixed into their archaeological layers from overlying modern human ones is debated Burial claims edit nbsp A claimed Neanderthal burial at Kebara Cave Carmel Range Israel Thermoluminescence dates place Neanderthal levels at Kebara at ca 60 000 BP Skeleton of an adult man nicknamed Moshe 25 35 years old height 1 70 m found in 1983 Further information Paleolithic burial No claim of a deliberate Neanderthal burial is universally accepted 35 36 37 An interpretation of pre Neanderthal Shanidar IV as having been ritually buried with flowers 38 was seriously questioned in the past 39 and to Paul B Pettitt convincingly eliminated A recent examination of the microfauna from the strata into which the grave was cut suggests that the pollen was deposited by the burrowing rodent Meriones tersicus Persian jird which is common in the Shanidar microfauna and whose burrowing activity can be observed today 40 However further excavations of the site which began in 2014 led to new discoveries and multiple lines of evidence that the Neanderthal was deliberately buried including the fact that the sediment layer around the body is visibly different to the layer below Additionally the sediment below the body shows signs of having been disturbed by digging According to Emma Pomeroy of the University of Cambridge That s quite good evidence that something was dug out and that s what the body s been put in 41 Diet editSee also Pleistocene human diet Neanderthals obtained protein in their diet from animal sources 42 Evidence based isotope studies show that Neanderthals ate primarily meat 43 44 45 Neanderthals were probably apex predators 46 and fed predominantly on deer namely red deer and reindeer as they were the most abundant game 47 but also on ibex wild boar aurochs and less frequently mammoth straight tusked elephant and woolly rhinoceros 48 49 50 Traces of fossilized plants have been extracted from Neanderthal teeth tartar found in Belgium and Iraq suggesting they also consumed plants 51 52 53 Burned food remnants thought to be about 70 000 years old were found in the Shanidar Caves 500 miles north of Baghdad Dr Ceren Kabukcu an archaeobotanist at the University of Liverpool said We present evidence for the first time of soaking and pounding pulse seeds by both Neanderthals and early modern humans 54 Cannibalism edit Neanderthals are thought to have practised cannibalism or ritual defleshing This hypothesis was formulated after researchers found marks on Neanderthal bones similar to the bones of a dead deer butchered by Neanderthals 55 56 Neanderthal bones from various sites Combe Grenal and Abri Moula in France Krapina in Croatia and Grotta Guattari in Italy have all been cited as bearing cut marks made by stone tools 57 However the results of technological tests have revealed varied causes Re evaluation of these marks using high powered microscopes comparisons to contemporary butchered animal remains and recent ethnographic cases of excarnation mortuary practises have shown that perhaps this was a case of ritual defleshing At Grotta Guattari the purposefully widened base of the skull for access to the brain is caused by carnivore action with hyena tooth marks found on the skull and mandible citation needed According to some studies which fragments of bones from Krapina show marks similar to those on bones from secondary burials at a Michigan ossuary 14th century AD and are indicative of removing the flesh of a partially decomposed body According to others the marks on the bones found at Krapina are indicative of defleshing although whether this was for nutritional or ritual purposes cannot be determined with certainty 58 Evidence of cannibalism includes Analysis of bones from Abri Moula in France does seem to suggest cannibalism was practised here Cut marks are concentrated in places expected in the case of butchery instead of defleshing Additionally the treatment of the bones was similar to that of roe deer bones assumed to be food remains found in the same shelter 59 At El Sidron in Northern Spain scientists have found evidence pointing to the cannibalism of 12 individuals by what is hypothesized to have been a neighbouring group of Neanderthals According to Carles Lalueza Fox of the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona the individuals three children aged from two to nine three teenagers and six adults appear to have been killed and eaten with their bones and skulls split open to extract the marrow tongue and brains Scientists speculate that the lack of any evidence of fire makes it likely that the event happened in winter during times when food was scarce 60 Evidence indicating cannibalism would not distinguish Neanderthals from modern humans which are known to have practised both cannibalism and mortuary defleshing e g the sky burial of Tibet Claims of art and adornment editFurther information Art of the Middle Paleolithic and Cave of Maltravieso nbsp Proposed Neanderthal jewelry white tailed eagle claw with striations at the Neanderthal site of Krapina Croatia circa 130 000 BP 61 A large number of claims of Neanderthal art adornment and structures have been made which would show Neanderthals were capable of symbolic thought and a degree of human rationality 62 63 64 65 However none of them are widely accepted as evidence of symbolism 66 as the dating often interlaps with anatomically modern human presence in Europe 67 68 Some notable findings are listed below Flower pollen on the body of pre Neanderthal Shanidar 4 Iraq had in 1975 been argued to be a flower burial 69 but the pollen could have also been deposited by natural events 70 71 In 1975 a piece of flat flint with a piece of bone pushed through a hole on the midsection dating to 32 40 or 75 kya 72 has been purported to resemble the upper half of a face with the bone representing eyes the Mask of la Roche Cotard 73 74 It is contested whether it represents a face or if it even constitutes art 75 Chatelperronian beads have been attributed to Neanderthals but the dating is uncertain and the beads may have been made by modern humans 76 77 78 79 Bird bones were argued to show evidence for feather plucking in a 2012 study examining 1 699 ancient sites across Eurasia which the authors controversially took to mean Neanderthals wore bird feathers as personal adornments 80 81 nbsp The scratched floor of Gorham s Cave Deep scratches on the floor of Gorham s Cave Gibraltar were dated to older than 39 kya in 2012 which some have controversially interpreted as Neanderthal abstract art 82 83 84 85 In 2015 a study argued that several 130 000 year old eagle talons found in a cache near Krapina Croatia along with Neanderthal bones had been modified to be used as jewellery 61 86 A similar talon necklace was reported in 2019 at Cova Forada in Spain 87 88 Two artificial 176 000 year old stalagmite ring structures several metres wide more than 300 m 980 ft from the entrance within Bruniquel Cave France were reported in 2016 Being so far inside the cave also shows the use of artificial lighting in underground environments 89 Other red painted stalagmites in Spain were dated to 65 500 years ago 90 In 2017 incision decorated raven bones from the Zaskalnaya VI Kolosovskaya Neanderthal site Crimea Micoquian industry dated to 43 38 kya were reported Given there are 17 of these objects at seven different sites in the area and the notches on all of them are more or less equidistant to each other they are very unlikely to have originated from simple butchering 91 In 2018 red painted symbols comprising hand stencils a ladder shaped figure 90 dots discs lines and representations of animals on the cave walls of several caves across Spain 700 km 430 mi apart including La Pasiega 90 92 Cave of Maltravieso 90 Cave of El Castillo 93 and Dona Trinidad were dated to be older than 66 000 years ago 90 If the dating is correct they were painted at least 20 000 years before the arrival of anatomically modern humans in western Europe and demonstrate Neanderthals were capable of symbolic behaviour 90 67 68 94 The Cave of Los Aviones in Spain has yielded ochred and perforated marine shells red and yellow colourants and shell makeup containers 95 that feature residues of complex pigment mixtures 96 The pigments on the seashells were dated to 115 000 years old making these the oldest personal ornamentation known anywhere in the world predating the presence of Homo sapiens 97 96 98 99 In 2023 markings found in a cave in La Roche Cotard were identified as the oldest known Neanderthal engravings and have been dated to more than 57 000 years ago before modern humans arrived in the region 100 101 References edit Richards M P Pettitt P B Trinkaus E Smith F H Paunovic M Karavanic I June 2000 Neanderthal diet at Vindija and Neanderthal predation The evidence from stable isotopes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97 13 7663 36 Bibcode 2000PNAS 97 7663R doi 10 1073 pnas 120178997 PMC 16602 PMID 10852955 Skov Laurits Peyregne Stephane Popli Divyaratan Iasi Leonardo N M Deviese Thibaut Slon Viviane Zavala Elena I Hajdinjak Mateja Sumer Arev P Grote Steffi Bossoms Mesa Alba Lopez Herraez David Nickel Birgit Nagel Sarah Richter Julia 2022 10 19 Genetic insights into the social organization of Neanderthals Nature 610 7932 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Loire Valley France PLOS ONE 18 6 e0286568 Bibcode 2023PLoSO 1886568M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0286568 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 10284424 PMID 37343032 Sources Boe Louis Jean Jean Louis Heim Kiyoshi Honda Shinji Maeda July 2002 The potential Neandertal vowel space was as large as that of modern humans PDF Journal of Phonetics 30 3 465 84 doi 10 1006 jpho 2002 0170 Archived from the original PDF on November 24 2006 Lieberman Philip October 2007 Current views on Neanderthal speech capabilities A reply to Boe et al 2002 Journal of Phonetics 35 4 552 63 doi 10 1016 j wocn 2005 07 002 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Homo neanderthalensis nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Introduction to Paleoanthropology nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Homo neanderthalensis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neanderthal behavior amp oldid 1214883556 Language, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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