Cape Times

Scientists reconstruc­t ‘angry’ teen

- Deborah Kyvrikosai­os

THE last time anyone looked at Dawn’s face was 9 000 years ago.

Now the teenager can be seen again, after scientists reconstruc­ted her face to show what people looked like in the Mesolithic period, around 7 000 BCE. But she doesn’t look happy.

Dawn is believed to have been 15 to 18 when she died, based on an analysis of her bones and teeth. She has a protruding jaw, thought to be caused by chewing on animal skin to make it into soft leather – a common practice among people of that era – and a scowling expression.

Asked why she looked angry, orthodonti­cs professor Manolis Papagrikor­akis, who created a silicone reconstruc­tion of her face from a terracotta mould of her head, joked: “It’s not possible for her not to be angry during such an era.”

Dawn was possibly anaemic and may have suffered from scurvy, the researcher­s said. Evidence also pointed to hip and joint problems, which may have made it difficult for her to move and may have contribute­d to her death.

Discovered in a cave in 1993, the girl was named Avgi – Greek for “dawn” – because she lived during what is considered to be the dawn of civilisati­on.

Theopetra Cave, in the Thessaly region, was first inhabited about 100 000 years ago, according to the Culture Ministry. Stone tools from the Palaeolith­ic, Mesolithic and Neolithic periods have been discovered, as well as pottery from the Neolithic period.

Dawn is on display at the Acropolis Museum in Athens.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS/Costas Baltas ?? ‘POSSIBLY ANAEMIC’: The reconstruc­ted face of Dawn, a teenager who lived around 7 000 BCE in a cave in Greece, is displayed during a presentati­on at the Acropolis Museum in Athens.
Picture: REUTERS/Costas Baltas ‘POSSIBLY ANAEMIC’: The reconstruc­ted face of Dawn, a teenager who lived around 7 000 BCE in a cave in Greece, is displayed during a presentati­on at the Acropolis Museum in Athens.

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