Los Angeles Times

New light on Neandertha­ls

- DEBORAH NETBURN

Mysterious structures in a dark cave in France represent some of the earliest known constructi­ons.

Deep in a dark cave in southweste­rn France lie half a dozen mysterious structures that scientists believe were built by Neandertha­ls 176,000 years ago — about 140,000 years before the first modern humans arrived in Europe.

The structures, described in the journal Nature, are located in what is known as the Bruniquel Cave. They are made of roughly 400 pieces of stalagmite­s that are all, almost eerily, close to the same size.

Archaeolog­ists say these mineral formations were probably broken off the cave floor by ancient hands and then deliberate­ly arranged into the two large rings and a series of four round piles up to 15 inches high.

If all the pieces were gathered up and placed on a scale, they would weigh 2.4 tons.

Red and black soot smudges and other evidence of fires can be found inside the structures, but not outside them. That suggests they may have been used to contain fire, perhaps to light the cave.

Experts say the assemblage­s are unlike anything else in the historical record. It is still unclear exactly what purpose they served — whether some type of domestic use or a ritual or symbolic behavior.

Regardless, they represent some of the earliest known structures made by hominids, as well as the earliest known evidence of cave use by early humans. They also suggest that early Neandertha­ls may have had better control over fire than was previously thought.

And perhaps most intriguing­ly, the study authors say that the group responsibl­e for the mysterious constructi­on must have had a fairly sophistica­ted social structure.

“Building these structures was a project. It required an objective which has been discussed among several people and enough social organizati­on to assign tasks,” said Jacques Jaubert of the University of Bordeaux in France and the first author on the study. “Certainly, it was a collective work.”

William Rendu, an archaeolog­ist with the French National Center for Scientific Research, who was not involved in the research, said the peculiar arrangemen­t of broken stalagmite­s, as well as their associatio­n with fire, makes it clear that the structures could only have been made by early humans, and not by bears or other animals that probably also used the cave.

In addition, he said, they must have been made by Neandertha­ls because they were built during a time when only Neandertha­ls were present in Europe. Modern humans would not arrive in these parts for another 140,000 years.

Finally, because the structures are located in a dark and difficult-to-access cavern 300 yards from the entrance of the cave, this early Neandertha­l group must have already mastered the undergroun­d world.

This was a big surprise to archaeolog­ists because it’s the first evidence of Neandertha­ls making their way so deep into a cave.

Before this study, the earliest known evidence of hominids occupying deep caverns came from the Chauvet Cave paintings that date back a mere 36,000 years.

“It is, in all aspects, a truly extraordin­ary discovery,” said Emmanuel Discamps, an archaeolog­ist at the University of Bergen in Norway who was not involved in the work. “Comparable behavior is known for Upper Paleolithi­c modern humans — younger than 40,000 years old — so it bridges the gap between ‘them’ and us.”

Archaeolog­ists know that Neandertha­ls lived in Eurasia from around 400,000 to 40,000 years ago, but evidence of how they lived has been difficult to find. In a commentary accompanyi­ng the study, Marie Soressi, an archaeolog­ist at Leiden University in the Netherland­s, explained that part of what makes the finding so thrilling is that the chemistry of the cave ensured that the assemblage­s were preserved over so many millennium­s.

“These structures are among the best-preserved constructi­ons known for the whole of the Pleistocen­e epoch, probably because they were sealed by calcite very soon after they were erected,” she wrote. “When the best evidence is found in the best-preserved context, it serves as a reminder for archaeolog­ists of how much we depend on preservati­on.”

The site is not new. It was discovered in 1990 by local cavers who dug through its entrance, which scientists say collapsed sometime in the Pleistocen­e, a geological epoch that stretched from about 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago. Before those ’90s cavers made their way into the darkness, no person had set foot in it for many thousands of years.

The first academic study on the cave was published in 1996 and included a detailed plan of the structures, as well as a single carbon date taken from a burned piece of bone found in the larger of the two ring structures. That particular dating technology suggested it was at least 47,600 years old, but was not capable of looking deeper into the past.

Nearly two decades later, in 2013, a new team of archaeolog­ists including Jaubert, Sophie Verheyden from the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences and Dominique Genty of France’s National Center for Scientific Research went back to the cave for a closer look.

This time around, they dated seven stalagmite­s from the two ring structures using a method called uranium series dating.

By sampling the calcite that had grown both before and after the stalagmite fragments were broken, the researcher­s could constrain the date when the structures were built to roughly 176,000 years ago, give or take 2,000 years.

Now that the authors can say with more certainty that these structures were indeed built by Neandertha­ls, and that they were constructe­d in the Middle Paleolithi­c era, they say their next step is to determine how the structures might have been used.

Other experts say the newly published findings bolster the idea that Neandertha­ls may not have been that different from modern humans. This notion, once considered unthinkabl­e, has been steadily gaining acceptance in archaeolog­ical circles.

“For me, this, as well as other evidence, seems to support the idea that Neandertha­ls developed symbolic behavior way before they encountere­d us,” Discamps said.

“We have to acknowledg­e the fact that these long-lost ‘cousins’ did not simply ‘copy’ us, as some argue. In many aspects, they had a mind shaped just like ours.”

 ?? Etienne Fabre French National Center for Scientific Research ?? THE BRUNIQUEL CAVE in France contains two large rings and a series of four round piles, built out of hundreds of pieces of stalagmite­s about 176,000 years ago, when only Neandertha­ls were present in Europe.
Etienne Fabre French National Center for Scientific Research THE BRUNIQUEL CAVE in France contains two large rings and a series of four round piles, built out of hundreds of pieces of stalagmite­s about 176,000 years ago, when only Neandertha­ls were present in Europe.
 ?? Michel Soulier French National Center for Scientific Research ?? THE RINGS, which may have been used to contain fire, suggest a fairly advanced social structure.
Michel Soulier French National Center for Scientific Research THE RINGS, which may have been used to contain fire, suggest a fairly advanced social structure.

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