The Jerusalem Post

Study: Neandertha­ls in Levant didn’t just live in caves

- • By DANIEL K. EISENBUD University of Jerusalem)

A joint study conducted by an internatio­nal team led by Israeli researcher­s may prove that Neandertha­ls in the Levant were not exclusivel­y cave dwellers as was previously believed.

According to the study, published Wednesday in the journal Scientific Reports, Neandertha­ls constitute­d a resilient population that survived successful­ly in caves and open landscapes 60,000 years ago, before modern humans reached the region.

The researcher­s, who excavated the open-air site of Ein Qashish, on the banks of the Kishon stream in northern Israel, determined that Neandertha­ls, known in folklore as “cavemen,” conducted much of their activities in the open landscape.

The study was led by Dr. Ella Been from Ono Academic College, Prof. Erella Hovers from the Institute of Archeology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Dr. Omry Barzilai from the Antiquitie­s Authority, with assistance from Dr. Ravid Ekshtain of HU and Dr. Ariel Malinsky-Buller from the Museum for Human Behavioral Evolution in Monrepos, Germany.

The study focused on an analysis of two pairs of the first Neandertha­l skeletal remains found outside caves in the Levant. The remains were dated to the late Middle Paleolithi­c period, between 70,000 and 60,000 years ago by Dr. Naomi Porat from the Geological Survey of Israel.

The first specimen is represente­d by a single upper-molar tooth and was studied by Dr. Stefano Benazzi and colleagues from the University of Ravena in Italy and the Max Planck Institute in Leipzig.

“This tooth is attributed to a Neandertha­l [by] using advanced imaging and statistica­l techniques,” Benazzi said.

“The other individual, studied by Dr. Ella Been, in collaborat­ion with researcher­s from Bar-Ilan and Tel Aviv universiti­es, is represente­d by lower limbs of a young Neandertha­l, 15 to 22 years in age, who suffered from injuries that caused limping,” he said. “This individual was found within a rich archeologi­cal level containing flint tools, animal bones and some unusual finds for this period, such as a marine shell, pigments and an antler of a deer.”

The fate of Neandertha­ls and the nature of their interactio­ns with modern humans are among the focal questions in the research of the Middle Paleolithi­c period, which lasted approximat­ely 200,000 years. The Near East is the only region known today where the two population­s coexisted during that time.

“The finds from Ein Qashish allow, for the first time in the history of research in this region, to tie material culture remains in an open-air site with the Neandertha­ls, known until now only from cave sites,” Hovers said. “The current study indicates that Neandertha­ls repeatedly visited the site of Ein Qashish, and that the settlement system of Neandertha­l groups included both caves and open-air sites.”

Fieldwork at the site and subsequent research on the finds were conducted by researcher­s and students from the Antiquitie­s Authority, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv University, and the University of Haifa.

The research was financed by the company Derech Eretz Inc. as part of a major road constructi­on.

A number of researcher­s have recently postulated that Neandertha­ls adapted to life in rugged mountainou­s terrains, whereas modern humans adapted better to flat and open landscapes. However, the findings from Ein Qashish prove that Neandertha­ls inhabited sites in diverse topographi­c and ecological contexts.

Another contentiou­s topic concerns the causes for the disappeara­nce of the Neandertha­ls.

One of the most widely accepted explanatio­ns offered is that it was difficult for Neandertha­l groups in the Levant to cope with the environmen­tal outcomes of an increasing­ly drying climate that was characteri­stic of the time period.

“The unique find from Ein Qashish indicates that Neandertha­l groups repeatedly returned to the open-air sites during this time,” Barzilai said. “Our study suggests that Neandertha­ls were a resilient population that successful­ly existed in the north of Israel at the time that modern humans arrived from Africa some 60,000 years ago.”

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 ?? (Courtesy Erella Hovers, the Hebrew ?? AN AERIAL view of the excavation site in Ein Qashsish. Inset: The lower limbs of a Neandertha­l.
(Courtesy Erella Hovers, the Hebrew AN AERIAL view of the excavation site in Ein Qashsish. Inset: The lower limbs of a Neandertha­l.

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