The Jerusalem Post

Experts discover ‘prehistori­c MDA’

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN

about 35,000 years ago, an individual who belonged to a hunter-gatherer group settled somewhere in northern Israel was playing when they fell and seriously hurt his foot. We will never know exactly what happened to the young person whose remains were uncovered at the Manot Cave in the western Galilee.

however, tel aviv university anthropolo­gists who examined the foot bones have found the prehistori­c community might have practiced a form of public medicine.

as explained in a paper recently published in the Journal of Human Evolution, other members of the clan took care of the injured child, allowing him not only to survive but to even recover quite well from the fracture and die a long time later from unrelated causes.

such a testimony of the solidarity and mutual support that existed among humans who lived more than 20,000 years before the agricultur­al revolution is one of the most remarkable aspects of what has emerged from the foot excavated at Manot Cave, said the study’s leader, dr. hila May of the department of anatomy and anthropolo­gy, dan david Center for human evolution and biohistory research at tau.

“We found the bones during several seasons of excavation at the Manot Cave,” May explained to The Jerusalem Post. “We came to the conclusion that they belonged to the same individual both because they were found in the same layer in proximity of each other and because, after we cleaned them, we realized that they perfectly matched.”

the scientists were able to ascertain the individual had suffered from a fracture in his second metatarsal but the fracture managed to heal and they died a long time later.

“foot injuries cause a lot of suffering since one cannot walk properly,” May pointed out, adding that the type of injury suffered from the prehistori­c person is still common today, especially among athletes and children. she added that, even now, it requires surgery or at least several weeks wearing a cast before a patient can go back to normal activity.

“this means that the community that this individual was part of supported the individual while they could not walk and gave them food. because the fracture healed so well, we can even speculate that they managed to find a way to immobilize the foot for some time, the same way today someone would wear a cast,” May said.

even though they think the person was male, the scientists were not able to establish the gender with certainty since this is informatio­n is difficult to determine by just looking at foot bones and they were not able to extract the dna, as it is the standard in this kind of cases.

“In Israel, dna gets destroyed very fast because of the hot climate. Moreover, extracting dna from a foot bone is challengin­g, contrary to what happens with parts of the skeletons where there is more compact bone. finding dna from so long ago is in general extremely rare. We were not able to find dna traces in any of the remains uncovered in Manot,” May explained. they estimated the individual was between 15 and 20 years old.

“We know that around 15,000 years ago the average life expectancy for hunter-gatherers was about 30 years. earlier on it might have been something similar or even shorter,” the evolutiona­ry anthropolo­gist said.

the Manot Cave discovery is not the first case in the world showing that our ancestors started to take care of the most vulnerable, but it is still significan­t because very little remains known about these hunter-gatherer groups, especially about their social behavior.

“We know they lived in small groups, composed by maybe a few dozen individual­s, moving around according to food availabili­ty. Generally, we understand that men went hunting while women took care of gathering food and of the children,” May added.

about the young person’s remains revealed in Manot, the researcher­s speculate the body was placed there on purpose to be buried, potentiall­y showing compassion not only for the weak but also for the dead.

“the presence of several artifacts such as flint tools and shells brought from somewhere else may suggest that we are in the presence of an organized burial. however, we cannot prove it.”

When the archaeolog­ists first came across the bones, excavating the site between 2014 and 2017, their goal was to determine whether they belonged to a homo sapiens or to a neandertha­l.

“We knew that in Israel at that time we had both. according to the shape and the size of the bone, we could establish that it belonged to a homo sapiens. however, we also found some neandertha­l traits,” the researcher told the Post.

asked whether this could mean that mixed sapiens-neandertha­l communitie­s existed, she responded affirmativ­ely.

“We don’t know what was the pattern of their interactio­n, if females went to neandertha­l groups or maybe the opposite. but we know that modern humans interbred with neandertha­ls, contrary to what was believed for many years,” May stated. “the fact that we see neandertha­l characteri­stics in the remains we found in the Manot Cave means they were mating, they had kids together, even though they looked morphologi­cally different.”

“all homo sapiens who left africa about 65,000 years ago had some neandertha­l genes. It raises a very interestin­g question on how we define species,” May concluded.

our ancestors, or at least some of them, cared for each other and were able to overcome physical and even genetic difference­s. do we, their descendant­s living in the 21st century, still have something to learn from them?

 ?? (Prof. Israel Hershkovit­z) ?? MANOT CAVE. A discovery of a child’s fractured bones revealed that individual­s must have taken care of the injury, allowing the child not only to survive but to recover from the fracture.
(Prof. Israel Hershkovit­z) MANOT CAVE. A discovery of a child’s fractured bones revealed that individual­s must have taken care of the injury, allowing the child not only to survive but to recover from the fracture.

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