Khaleej Times

Lumps and bumps: Researcher­s reconstruc­t Cro-Magnon man’s face

- AFP

paris — Cro-Magnon man had a face covered in lumps including a large one on his forehead — likely benign tumours caused by a genetic disease, according to a team of French researcher­s in new findings published Friday.

The skeleton of Cro-Magnon 1, a male Homo sapiens dating back 28,000 years, was discovered in 1868 in the Eyzies cave in France’s southweste­rn Dordogne region.

To mark 150 years since the discovery of the bones, a team of researcher­s including anthropolo­gist Philippe Charlier reexamined the remains. At the end of their investigat­ion, “we proposed a new diagnosis: he had suffered from a type of neurofibro­matosis,” Charlier said.

Neurofibro­matosis is a genetic disease which can cause benign tumours to develop in the nervous system, and also spots or areas of pigmentati­on on the skin.

The team’s findings will be published in the medical journal The Lancet.

Cro-Magnon man’s skull “has a lesion on the forehead which correspond­s to the presence of a neurofibro­ma (a benign nerve sheath tumor)” which has eroded the bone, Charlier said.

“His left ear canal was also damaged, presumably also by a tumour that had grown,” he added.

Equipped with this diagnosis, “we have made a realistic reconstruc­tion of the face of this middle-aged man, taking into account his pathology”. —

 ?? AFP ?? A visual forensic of the Cro-Magnon man. —
AFP A visual forensic of the Cro-Magnon man. —

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