New York Daily News

Neandertha­ls more like us, research shows

MYSTERY OF FIRE UNRAVELS

- BY DEBORAH NETBURN

Humans may not have been the only hominids who knew how to start a fire long ago. New research suggests that as early as 50,000 years ago, Neandertha­ls wielded this power as well.

The work, published in Scientific Reports, provides new evidence that Neandertha­ls may have created flames-on-demand by striking a small piece of pyrite against a biface — their favorite mutlipurpo­se stone tool.

Scientists already knew that Neandertha­ls were able to control and use fire, but controllin­g it and producing it are not the same thing, said Andrew Sorensen, a doctoral student in archaeolog­y at Leiden University in the Netherland­s who led the work.

“There is an ongoing debate in the world of early fire research as to whether Neandertha­ls could make fire for themselves, or if they were reliant on natural sources like wildfires started by lightning strikes from which they could collect fire later,” he said.

Early humans created fire by striking steel or pyrite against flint to create a shower of sparks, Sorensen said. The sparks fell on tinder, causing it to smolder. Then they would place a piece of that smoldering material into a bundle of dried grass and gently blow it into a flame.

Sorensen wondered if Neandertha­ls might have used a similar technique.

To answer that question, he experiment­ed with creating fire himself by striking a piece of pyrite against a replica of a biface. Then he compared the marks he made on his biface to marks on 50,000-year-old bifaces collected in several locations in France.

Bifaces are palm-sized, teardropsh­aped, multipurpo­se stone tools that functioned like a Neandertha­l Swiss army knife.

They carried them around with them as they moved from place to place and used them to butcher and skin animals, as well as to grind minerals into powder and to create other tools.

Sorensen said that the method of striking a small piece of pyrite against a biface was quite effective at producing sparks, although the results were variable.

“Some strikes produced only one spark, others produced showers of up to 10 sparks or so,” he said.

He also found that the microscopi­c mineral traces made by striking or rubbing flint against his modern-day biface to create sparks were similar to those found on the ancient bifaces he examined.

To make sure that the traces couldn’t have been made in other ways, he also experiment­ed with using his stone tool to perform other tasks like grinding ochre to make pigment and using it to carve another flint tool.

Indeed, he found that the same mineral traces that were left on the ancient tools most closely compared with the traces produced when he struck or forcefully rubbed pyrite against his own biface.

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