Neanderthals built some of the world's earliest constructions, which were just found deep in a French cave.
Circular heated
structures built by Neanderthals have been discovered deep inside a cave
in France and are now among the world's oldest known human-made
constructions, a new study has found.
The structures, dated
to around 176,000 years ago and described in the journal Nature, provide
evidence that Neanderthals were clever about using fire, had complex
spatial organizational abilities, and explored at least one extensive
cave system. They additionally indicate that humans began occupying
caves much earlier than previously thought; until now the oldest
formally proven cave use dated back only 38,000 years (Chauvet).
The
site where the constructions were found -- Bruniquel Cave in
southwestern France -- was only just discovered in 1990 by scientist and
spelunker François Rouzaud.
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"Bruniquel
Cave's entry had collapsed, such that it remained untouched for
millennia," project leader Jacques Jaubert, a professor of prehistory at
the University of Bordeaux, told Discovery News, explaining why the
cave took so long to find.
Rouzaud had hoped to investigate
Bruniquel Cave further, but he died in 1999 while exploring another
French cave, Foissac in Aveyron. Access to Bruniquel was restricted
after its 1990 discovery until 2013, when the new research began.
While
investigating the cave, Jaubert and his team found that it includes at
least six structures built by Neanderthals using nearly 400 stalagmites
and stalagmite fragments. The paper focuses on two of the constructions
that are circular-shaped and large, with one being 22 feet wide and the
other just over 7 feet wide.
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The
stalagmites were stacked in layers to form ringed "walls." The
materials were red, black and cracked in places, providing evidence for
hearth fires that the researchers believe were built above ground,
rather than directly on the cave floor. A burnt bear bone, along with
bits of char, was also found.
Jaubert and his team wrote:
"Based on most Upper Paleolithic cave incursions, we could assume that
they represent some kind of symbolic or ritualistic behavior, but could
they rather have served for an unknown domestic use or simply as a
refuge? Future research will try to answer these questions."
Given
the depth and darkness of the cave, Jaubert said it is at least clear
that Neanderthals were controlling fire for lighting, in addition to
using it for heating and possibly other purposes.
Drilling into the stalagmitic floor inside one of the structures in the Bruniquel Cave.
The
researchers conclude that modern humans did not build the structures
since there is no evidence for Homo sapiens in the region at the time
they were constructed. Neanderthals, on the other hand, were known to be
in Europe and Asia then.
The scientists suspect that the
Neanderthals at Bruniquel Cave left behind tools and possibly other
items, but Jaubert said that such likely objects would have been
"covered with thick calcite, leaving them frozen for eternity." Time
will tell if future excavations within the cave can recover additional
artifacts.
Marie Soressi, an archaeologist at Leiden
University, wrote a separate "News & Views" piece, also published in
Nature, about the discoveries.
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Soressi
believes that the newly found structures "are the oldest directly dated
constructions attributed to Neanderthals, and the first ones for which
we can be confident of that attribution."
She added, "Only
further discovery of underground structures will help to establish
whether these structures were opportunistic ones relating to an
accidental underground visit, or whether they were part of regular and
planned Neanderthal activities."
Soressi suspects that
greater evidence for Neanderthal culture could be lacking simply due to
poor preservation. If it were not for a fortuitous series of events,
including the natural closure of Bruniquel Cave's entrance for thousands
of years, the Neanderthal-built structures would not have been
preserved.
Jaubert thinks that the new research, along with other recent finds, is blurring the line between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals.
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"The
differences are being erased," he said. "We now believe that
Neanderthals in Europe and modern humans in Africa had very close, if
not interchangeable, technical abilities, social capacities, symbolic
ways of life and more."
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