Caves that are a reflection of the past
A scientific study, involving the University of Seville, has for the first time described a structure compatible with theoretical studies of anoxic heating.n The structure looks like a simple pit, and this simplicity may be why this structure has not been identified.
Only through a multitude of analyses and the collaboration of a multidisciplinary team has it been possible to demonstrate its use as an anoxic heating chamber. The discovery was made in Vanguard Cave (Gibraltar, UK), part of the ‘Gorham’s Caves Complex,’ which has been recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2016.
This complex has once again proved its ability to preserve authentic snapshots of past human activities due to the rapid advance of a dune that has sealed its remains.
To reach the conclusion that this structure could only have been made by Neanderthals some 60,000 years ago, 31 researchers from more than 5 countries, specialists in 15 different disciplines, worked together.
Its branches of knowledge include palaeobonatics, archaeology, ichnology, geochemistry and mineralogy.
“They were not the brutes of the popular imagination”
Fernando Muñiz, a lecturer in the Department of Crystallography, Mineralogy and Agricultural Chemistry at the University of Seville, explains that “our extinct cousins were not the brutalised humans of popular imagination.”
This human species has been shown to have cognitive abilities, as reflected in research showing mastery of industrial processes for making resin as an adhesive to attach stone points to spear handles.
On the other hand, excavation manager Clive Finlayson explains that:
“Neanderthals had to go through a series of thought processes, choosing which plants to select and figuring out how to extract resin without burning them.”
To demonstrate that the structure created by Neanderthals is viable, methodologies have been developed and an experimental archaeology exercise has even been completed.
The geochemical and fossil pollen evidence suggests that the resin was obtained from prickly rockrose (cistus ladanifer) rather than birch, a rarer tree in Mediterranean latitudes at the time.
It is known that until the 20th century oil of labdanum was obtained from rockroses to be used as perfume, cough syrup and as an antiseptic in a method very similar to the one described in this study.
This project, led by the Museum of Gibraltar, the University of Murcia and the Andalusian Institute of Earth Sciences (CSIC), with the participation of the University of Seville, sets a precedent in understanding of the technological and organisational capacity of Neanderthals, while also opening up new opportunities to identify and analyse similar structures at other sites.
Signs of primitive art
In 2012, Finlayson’s team found a strange hashtag-like mark on a piece of limestone, which has interpreted by some experts as a sign of primitive art.
They collected feathers, but only black ones, from a wide variety of birds, possibly for aesthetic or ceremonial purposes.
“They used medicinal plants, buried their dead, made jewellery and specialist tools, as well as ochre and other pigments, perhaps to paint their faces or bodies.
Their tracheal anatomy suggests that they could speak and probably had high-pitched, hoarse voices,” Muñiz says.