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The Archaeology of People: Dimensions of Neolithic Life, Whittle

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<< News >> Cave Clue Reveals Ancient Bohemian Life

Submitted by coldrum on Wednesday, 12 September 2007  Page Views: 1664

Natural PlacesCountry: Spain Type: Cave or Rock Shelter

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A prehistoric Spanish hunting group that may have even had its own gang symbols appears to have drawn, hunted, crashed in a cave, eaten, recycled waste and moved on, suggests a new study.

Like a good detective story, the research hinged on one major clue — a buried pile of mysterious black bones found in a dark, dank room at the interior of El Mirón Cave near the northern coast of the Iberian Peninsula.

This cave was like a residential hotel for traveling groups of Stone Age hunters, according to lead author Ana Belén Marín Arroyo, who worked with Lawrence Straus and other scientists.

"El Mirón Cave is located in a strategic point next to the access routes to the high zone of the River Asón and has a wide visibility," Arroyo told Discovery News. "It's a mountain settlement next to the coastal plain that would allow a seasonal residential mobility from the coast towards the interior at summer time, coinciding with the migrations of red deer herds to the high altitude grass."

Arroyo, a researcher in the Department of Geography, Prehistory and Archaeology at the Universidad del Pais Vasco in Spain, said engraved red deer shoulder blades, along with images of red deer hinds found at the site were probably "stylistic markers of a regional band."

The cave is also well known for rock art and decorative objects, such as shell and tooth ornaments.

The black bones, which date to around 13,000 years ago, intrigued Arroyo and her team, especially as different colored bones were excavated within other parts of the cave.

Funded by several groups, including the National Geographic Society, the researchers put the dark bones through a barrage of tests, such as X-ray analysis, photoelectron spectroscopy to detect energy levels present, several types of chemical analysis, and more.

The findings have been accepted for publication in the Journal of Archaeological Science.

The scientists first determined that the bones belonged to butchered red deer, ibex, roe deer, chamois (a European goat antelope) and small carnivores. The tests revealed the bones had not been painted or burned.

Instead, the team determined black staining was due to the presence of manganese oxides and hydroxides. In an amazing bit of detective work, the scientists discovered that abandoned organic matter — basically leftover meat and other food waste — decomposed in the room with the bones. Compounds generated by the process then increased metal solubility and mobility, "favoring the migration of manganese to buried bones."

Based on the timing of this natural decomposition, along with clues provided by deer dental remains, the researchers believe the hunters killed mostly red deer in the spring and summer, during which time they stayed in the cave. They likely occupied the cave's large, well-lit outer vestibule, and used the interior room with the bones as a makeshift place for garbage.

Geoffrey Clark, a professor in the Department of Anthropology at Arizona State University, told Discovery News that he shares the team's conclusion about the black bones.

He said, "The damp, dark conditions in the inner cave, combined with the rotting garbage, resulted in heavy manganese staining in what was probably a dump."

Clark added that the study provides "a very consistent explanation for a complex phenomenon that sheds light on the human use of the cave."

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Europe's oldest axes discovered date back to half a million years by coldrum on Sunday, 04 October 2009
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Europe's oldest axes discovered date back to half a million years

New analysis has dated hand axes from southern Spain to nearly half a million years old, suggesting that advanced Stone Age tools were present in Europe far earlier than was previously believed.

Acheulian axes, which date to at least 1.5 million years ago, have been found in Africa, and similar tools at least 700,000 years old have been found in Israel and China.

But in Europe, sophisticated tool-making was thought to stretch back only around 500,000 years.

According to a report in Nature News, the Iberian axes were found at two sites dated to at least 760,000 and 900,000 years old, respectively.

The cave sediment levels that included the two axes also held what some archaeologists believe may be small tools made using the so-called Levallois technique of shaping stone, known to have existed in Europe only about 300,000 years ago.

“Up to now, no one imagined this level of tool-making was going on in Europe about a million years ago,” said Michael Walker, an archaeologist at the University of Murcia who has studied the region near Granada where the axes were found.

Gary Scott and Luis Gibert of the Berkeley Geochronology Center in California dated the sites using palaeomagnetic analysis, which uses known changes in the orientation of Earth’s magnetic field over time.

“This (find) tells us some things about these early humans’ brains, like the development of spatial conception. But not much, as cognitive ability changes very, very slowly,” said Thomas Wynn, a cognitive evolutionary biologist from the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs.

The Quipar Valley has historically been home to a lake environment of marshes and shallow lagoons.

The Solana del Zamborino and Estrecho del Quípar caves in the valley, where the axes were found, were first thought to be only about 200,000 years old.

But, after dates of stone flakes at a nearby location indicated they were much older, Gibert and Scott homed in on the caves’ rich sediments.

In addition to the palaeomagnetic technique, Gibert notes that a record in rock layers of the remains of micro-mammals such as rodents, developed by Walker’s team at Estrecho del Quípar, was crucial in confirming the dates.

The older dates for the Spanish axes are now expected to generate new studies at other European rock shelters bearing Acheulian artefacts.

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