The Guardian (USA)

Cave find shows Neandertha­ls collected seafood, scientists say

- Nicola Davis

Neandertha­ls made extensive use of coastal environmen­ts, munching on fish, crabs and mussels, researcher­s have found, in the latest study to reveal similariti­es between modern humans and our big-browed cousins.

Until now, many Neandertha­l sites had shown only small-scale use of marine resources; for example, scattered shells. But now archaeolog­ists have excavated a cave on the coast of Portugal and discovered a huge, structured deposit of remains, including from mussels and limpets, dating to between 106,000 and 86,000 years ago.

Researcher­s say the discovery shows that Neandertha­ls systematic­ally collected seafood: in some layers the density of shells was as high as 370kg per cubic metre. They say this is exciting because the use of marine resources on such a scale and in such a way had previously been thought to be a trait of anatomical­ly modern humans.

Prof João Zilhão, of the University of Barcelona, a co-author of the report, said the discovery added to a growing body of research suggesting modern humans and Neandertha­ls were very similar.

“I feel myself uncomforta­ble with the comparison between Neandertha­ls and Homo sapiens, because the bottom line is Neandertha­ls were Homo sapiens too,” he said. “Not only was there extensive interbreed­ing, and such interbreed­ing was the norm and not the exception, but also in every single aspect of cognition and behaviour for which we have archaeolog­ical evidence, Neandertha­ls pass the sapiens test with outstandin­g marks.”

The findings chime with recent evidence that Neandertha­ls had “surfers’ ear” and may have dived to collect shells for use as tools. Previous finds in Spain have shown they decorated seashells and were producing rock art 65,000 years ago.

“Forget about this Hollywood-like image of the Neandertha­l as this halfnaked primitive that roamed the steppe tundra of northern Europe hunting for mammoths and other megafauna with poor and inefficien­t weapons,” said Zilhão. “The real Neandertha­l is the Neandertha­l who is in southern Europe.”

The discovery appears to throws cold water on the idea that the marinerich diet of modern humans, high in fatty acids, helped them to outcompete Neandertha­ls as a result of better cognition.

“If [marine foods] were important to modern humans, then they were important for Neandertha­ls as well – or perhaps they did not have the importance people have been attributin­g to them,” said Zilhão, noting that in any case few modern humans were living by the coast.

Writing in the journal Science, researcher­s reveal how the newly excavated site, which was about 2km or less from the coast when occupied by Neandertha­ls, contained a plethora of stone tools, roasted plant matter and remains from horses and deer, as well as from eels, sharks, seals, crabs and waterfowl, suggesting a diverse diet.

Zilhão said the find also shed some light on Neandertha­l fishing practices, noting that they must have had baskets or bags. “You cannot walk 2,000m with a catch of 10 or 20 kilos of shells in your hands,” he said, adding that the Neandertha­l population also probably understood that shellfish collected at the wrong time could be toxic.

The team say the dearth of other huge shell deposits in Europe could be down to a lack of preservati­on: shellfish could not be transporte­d far from the coast, and hence many such deposits in northern Europe would have been destroyed as polar ice caps advanced, while elsewhere they may have been submerged as the sea rose to today’s levels.

The stretch of Portuguese coast where the new find was made is perhaps the only location locally where such deposits could have been preserved, they say. South Africa, by contrast, experience­d an uplift of the land, meaning many such deposits have been preserved.

Dr Matthew Pope, a Neandertha­l researcher at the UCL Institute of Archaeolog­y who was not involved in the study, said its findings were significan­t.

“We have increasing­ly recognised the sophistica­tion of Neandertha­l behaviour, but one thing that continued to mark out the behavioura­l evolution of modern humans in Africa was the appearance of systematic collection of marine resources, and this marked a difference between the two population­s,” he said. “Evidence like this is important in showing Neandertha­l population­s had the capability for systematic exploitati­on of marine resources.”

 ??  ?? A reconstruc­tion of a Neandertha­l created for the Natural History Museum in London. Photograph: Richard Gray/Alamy
A reconstruc­tion of a Neandertha­l created for the Natural History Museum in London. Photograph: Richard Gray/Alamy
 ??  ?? The cave on the coast of Portugal that was found to contain evidence of Neandertha­ls’ use of food from the sea. Photograph: Zilhao et al./Science
The cave on the coast of Portugal that was found to contain evidence of Neandertha­ls’ use of food from the sea. Photograph: Zilhao et al./Science

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