THE widely-held vision of Neanderthals as brutes may need a
stark rethink after research found they crafted the world’s earliest jewellery
from eagle talons 130,000 years ago, long before modern humans appeared in
Europe.
“While reviewing
eight, white-tailed eagle talons and an associated phalanx, on the latter I
noticed numerous cut marks and a revelation just struck me — they were made by
a human hand,” Davorka Radovcic, a curator at Croatia’s Natural History Museum,
told AFP.
The
revelation came in late 2013 while reviewing the Krapina Neanderthal collection
she had just taken over, items from a site once inhabited by the extinct people
in what is modern-day Croatia.
“I knew
immediately what might be the implication of that finding,” said the
anthropologist, carefully holding one of the talons that are kept in a small
box.
An international
study began with the research published earlier this month by the PLOS
peer-reviewed international online scientific publication.
The
Krapina site, some 50 kilometres (31 miles) north of Zagreb, has yielded the
world’s richest collection of Neanderthal fossils. The site containing the
remains of some 80 individuals, and including the talons, was discovered in
1899 by Croatian palaeontologist Dragutin Gorjanovic-Kramberger.
But it took 115
years to establish that the talons and phalanx at the Zagreb museum were
jewellery, and therefore used for a symbolic purpose.
“I simply had a
fresh eye,” Radovcic said modestly of her find that for decades had escaped the
numerous scientists visiting to study the rich collection.
She
initiated the research conducted along with two Croatian colleagues — Ankica
Oros Srsen and Jakov Radovcic — as well US anthropology professor David Frayer
from the University of Kansas.
The four
scientists for months carefully reviewed the specimens that had cut marks,
polished facets and abrasions suggesting they had been mounted into jewellery.
They could not
determine their symbolic value for Neanderthals or how they wore them, as a
necklace or a bracelet. But there is evidence they collected the remains of
eagles, as in the Krapina talon assemblage they identified at least three
individual birds
“This is, at
least for the time being, the world’s earliest jewellery,” Radovcic said.
Up until
now early jewellery was linked to anatomically modern humans — estimated to be
up to 110,000 years old — and consisting of shell beads found at prehistoric
sites in Israel.
The researchers
also say the Krapina jewellery indicates that contrary to long-held beliefs,
Neanderthals possessed the capacity for complex cognitive thinking.
“This is an
example of abstract thinking. It proves that Neanderthals possessed a symbolic
culture some 80,000 years before the appearance of more modern human forms in
Europe,” Radovcic emphasised.
Eagles,
with a wingspan of more than two meters (seven feet), were among the most
impressive flying predators in the Neanderthal environment, and the mighty
birds apparently had special value.
“I believe they
were admiring eagles ... This jewellery is a message. We don’t know what it
means, but perhaps they wanted to give themselves the characteristics of an
eagle,” the young woman said.
The new Krapina
research may further help reduce prejudice about Neanderthals, seen as clumsy,
stupid brutes in popular culture. “When you say to someone that he is a
Neanderthal it sounds derogatory,” Radovcic said.
Neanderthals
lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East for up to 250,000
years. The reason they vanished some 40,000 years ago is a matter of debate.
According to
some theories, their population dwindled due to extreme cold winters.
Others believe
they were outsmarted by the more sophisticated Homo sapiens who moved into
Neanderthal territory from what is now Africa.
Eagle talons are
rarely found at prehistoric sites in Europe and rarely involve more than one
element. Krapina is the only Neanderthal site where eight have been found.
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