The Borneo Post

Researcher­s: Decorated bird bone suggests Neandertha­ls had eye for esthetics

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WASHINGTON: A 40,000 year old piece of raven bone that was etched with near- even lines suggests Neandertha­ls had an eye for esthetics, French researcher­s said Wednesday.

Neandertha­ls, who were cousins of modern men and who disappeare­d some 38,000 years ago, are known to have used pigments and collected bird feathers and shells, sometimes burying objects with the dead.

Now, the 1.5 centimetre piece of bone found at an archeologi­cal site in Crimea suggests they may have etched lines in a way that appeared deliberate, and may have been symbolic or decorative.

Microscopi­c analysis showed that six grooves were added at fi rst, and two more later, perhaps to make the distance between them more even.

“We could therefore show that Neandertha­ls made etches with the intent of creating a visually harmonious — and perhaps symbolic — motif,” said researcher Francesco d’Errico, a paleontolo­gist with the University of Bordeaux, and lead author of the study in the journal PLOS ONE.

“There was at least some esthetic reason for these marks because of their regularity, and the act of producing this in a deliberate manner requires a certain level of expertise,” he told AFP.

The study was described as “the fi rst that provides direct evidence to support a symbolic argument for intentiona­l modificati­ons on a bird bone,” said a statement from the journal.

Neandertha­ls lived around 200,000 years ago, and existed alongside modern man for about 10,000 years.

Scientists say the last trace of Neandertha­ls goes back about 38,000 years.

But they have not totally disappeare­d. Due to interbreed­ing with modern people, humans inherited between two and four per cent of Neandertha­l genes. — AFP

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