The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Neandertha­l Ned comes back from the dead

50,000-year-old caveman brought back to life by Dundee researcher

- JAKE KEITH jkeith@thecourier.co.uk

A Dundee researcher has helped bring a 50,000-year-old Neandertha­l back to life for a major BBC TV show.

Dr Christophe­r Rynn, an expert in facial reconstruc­tion at Dundee University, will feature in Neandertha­ls: Meet Your Ancestors, due to be aired for the first time tomorrow.

Viewers will see Dr Rynn reconstruc­t the face of an ancient skull fossil found in Iraq. Taking clues from the bone structure, he has used his expertise to recreate the features of the caveman, named Ned, who has not been seen for more than 50,000 years.

Also featured in the programme is Hollywood star Andy Serkis, whose company, the Imaginariu­m, has used the image to create the first scientific­ally-accurate, 3D, working avatar of a Neandertha­l.

With the help of cutting-edge CGI technology, the show’s producers were also able to reconstruc­t a Neandertha­l hunt. The same technology helped Serkis star as Gollum in Lord of the Rings and Caesar in Planet of the Apes.

The hunters’ voices have also been modelled – 40,000 years after they died out; and to test how well Neandertha­ls would blend in to modern society, the show’s makers put Ned among commuters on a busy tube train.

Dr Rynn, who works in the university’s Centre for Anatomy and Human Identifica­tion, said: “I was working from a plastic cast of Ned’s skull, which tells a story in itself. Ned was in his 30s when he died but the skull shows he had received a severe head injury when he was in his teens. The severity and location of the injury means he would likely have been blind and deaf on the left side, while the withered nature of the right side of his skeleton means he would have been quite severely disabled. Despite this, he lived for another 20 years after his injury and was found with other members of his family.

“He would have been unable to care for himself so this provided the first evidence that Neandertha­ls looked after each other.”

 ??  ?? The first of the twopart series will be broadcast on BBC2 tomorrow at 8pm, with the second aired at the same time next week.
The first of the twopart series will be broadcast on BBC2 tomorrow at 8pm, with the second aired at the same time next week.

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