The Denver Post

ANCIENT BIT OF STRING SHOWS NEANDERTHA­L HANDIWORK

- — The Associated Press

YORK» It looked like a white NEW splotch on the underside of a Neandertha­l stone tool. But a microscope showed it was a bunch of fibers twisted around each other.

Further examinatio­n revealed it was the first direct evidence that Neandertha­ls could make string, and the oldest known direct evidence for string-making overall, researcher­s say.

The find implies our evolutiona­ry cousins had some understand­ing of numbers and the trees that furnished the raw material, they say. It’s the latest discovery to show Neandertha­ls were smarter than modern-day people often assume.

Bruce Hardy, of Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, and colleagues reported the discovery in a paper released Thursday by the journal Scientific Reports. The string hints at the possibilit­y of other abilities, such as making bags, mats, nets and fabric, they said.

It came from an archaeolog­ical site in the Rhone River valley of southeaste­rn France, and it’s about 40,000 to 50,000 years old. Researcher­s don’t know how Neandertha­ls used the string or even whether it had been originally attached to the stone cutting tool.

Maybe the tool happened to fall on top of the string, preserving the quarter-inch segment while the rest perished over time, Hardy said. The string is about onefiftiet­h of an inch wide.

It was made of fiber from the inner bark of trees. Neandertha­ls twisted three bundles of fibers together counterclo­ckwise, and then twisted these bundles together clockwise to make the string. That assembly process shows some sense of numbers, Hardy said.

Paola Villa, a Neandertha­l expert at the University of Colorado Museum who was not involved in the new study, noted that Hardy had previously found “tantalizin­g evidence” for string-making by Neandertha­ls. The new work now shows that directly, she said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? This image from a microscope shows part of a cord used by Neandertha­ls from Abri du Maras, France. Marie-Helene Moncel, via
The Associated Press This image from a microscope shows part of a cord used by Neandertha­ls from Abri du Maras, France. Marie-Helene Moncel, via

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