• A reminder that Forum Moderator applications are currently still open! If you're interested in joining an active team of moderators for one of the biggest Pokémon forums on the internet, click here for info.
  • Due to the recent changes with Twitter's API, it is no longer possible for Bulbagarden forum users to login via their Twitter account. If you signed up to Bulbagarden via Twitter and do not have another way to login, please contact us here with your Twitter username so that we can get you sorted.

Neanderthal home made of mammoth bones discovered in Ukraine

GrnMarvl14

Lying
Joined
Jan 4, 2003
Messages
13,846
Reaction score
4
Source.

Up till recently, most researchers studying Neanderthals had assumed they were simple wanderers, hiding out in caves when the weather got bad. Now however, the discovery of the underpinnings of a house built by a group of Neanderthals, some 44,000 years ago, turns that thinking on its head. Discovered by a team of French archeologists from the Muséum National d'Histories Naturelle, in an area that had been under study since 1984, the home, as it were, was apparently based on mammoth bones. The team’s findings are to be published in the science journal Quaternary International.

Over the past decade, new information regarding Neanderthals, a human ancestor that died out approximately 30,000 years ago, has come to light that tends to reverse decades of thinking. Instead of a clumsy, dim-witted people, it appears Neanderthals were more advanced than most had thought. Evidence of cooking, burying their dead, making jewelry and perhaps even speaking to one another has come to light indicating that first assumptions were a little harsh. Now, with the discovery of a home built by Neanderthals, it’s clear they were far more sophisticated than anyone had imagined.

The home was apparently built in two parts. The lower part, or base, was made by assembling large mammoth bones to support the whole structure, which was 26 feet across at its widest. The bones themselves were likely obtained both through collecting those found on the ground and by killing the large beasts directly themselves. The Neanderthals who built the structure also obviously lived in it for quite some time as 25 different hearths were found inside. The researchers suggest that the house was once topped by wood or other material the builders were able to find.

The house was found in eastern Ukraine, believed to be the oldest known built of bones, near the town of Molodova, a place that doesn’t have much in the way of trees, thus the Neanderthals who built the house were demonstrating an ability to live in a rather barren place, living in homes they’d constructed while cooking and eating mammoth to survive. It also suggests that Neanderthals were capable of working and living together in groups in established communities.

Perhaps even more interesting was the fact that some of the bones used to build the house had decorative carvings and added pigments, clearly showing that those that built the house, were in fact, building a home.

Very cool finding. Nice to see us learning ever more about Neanderthals, and find them more and more impressive.
 
Not a huge fan of proto-human history (IMO, things didn't really start getting interesting until the big river civilizations showed up), but this is cool nonetheless. Always nice to learn more about the runners-up, so to speak, of human evolution.
 
I'm no archaeological expert, but who's to say it was a neanderthal home? Humans and mammoths coexisted for about 15,000 years, so it's entirely likely that this home was built by some of the first emerging human tribes in eastern Europe.

Or maybe I'm just being stubborn as it's shattering my view of the moronic ape creatures that beat each other with clubs...
 
Very interesting. They built it out bones because there weren't many trees. Guess Neanderthals weren't all knuckle-headed cave-dwelling simpletons who beat each other with clubs.
 
I'm no archaeological expert, but who's to say it was a neanderthal home? Humans and mammoths coexisted for about 15,000 years, so it's entirely likely that this home was built by some of the first emerging human tribes in eastern Europe.

Or maybe I'm just being stubborn as it's shattering my view of the moronic ape creatures that beat each other with clubs...

The Neanderthals who built the structure also obviously lived in it for quite some time as 25 different hearths were found inside.

And a LOT of the more recent Neanderthal knowledge points to a species that seems to have been as smart, if not smarter, than mankind (or whatever ancestor was running around) was at that time. It's definitely not the Neanderthal I grew up learning about, but to me, it's far more interesting.
 
Actually, some of them might have been knuckle-draggers, but wait until news of this reaches PETA's ears. They'll ahve a field day protesting against ancient humans.
 
Please note: The thread is from 13 years ago.
Please take the age of this thread into consideration in writing your reply. Depending on what exactly you wanted to say, you may want to consider if it would be better to post a new thread instead.
Back
Top Bottom