Neanderthals used feathers as 'personal ornaments'
22 September BBC
Our evolutionary cousins the Neanderthals were harvesting feathers
from birds in order to use them as personal ornaments, a study
suggests.The authors say the result provides yet more evidence that
Neanderthal thinking ability was similar to our own.
The analysis even suggests they had a preference for dark feathers,
which they selected from birds of prey and corvids such as ravens and
rooks. Details of the research appear in Plos One journal.Numerous
tribal peoples from history have also adorned themselves with feathers,
and the authors stress that they are not suggesting we learned the
practice from Neanderthals.Feather ornamentation could in fact go back
even further, to a common ancestor of modern humans and Neanderthals.
Clive Finlayson and Kimberly Brown from the Gibraltar Museum, along with
colleagues from Spain, Canada and Belgium, examined a database of 1,699
ancient sites across Eurasia, comparing data on birds at locations used
by humans with those that were not. They found a clear association
between raptor and corvid remains and sites that had been occupied by
humans.
They then looked more closely at bird bones found at Neanderthal
sites in Gibraltar, including Gorham's and Vanguard cave, near the base
of the rock: "The Neanderthals had cut through and marked the bones. But
what were they cutting? We realised a lot of it was wing bones,
particularly those holding large primary feathers," Prof Finlayson told
BBC News.Co-author Jordi Rosell, from Rovira i Virgili University in
Tarragona, Spain, said: "We saw the cut-marks on bird bones at one cave,
and then started seeing them in others. I think it's a common aspect to
the caves in this rock."Juan Jose Negro, director of the Donana
Biological Station in Seville, Spain, who is another co-author, said:
"The wings make up less than 20% of the weight of the body of those
birds," adding, "there is no meat in the wings - they were not consuming
these animals."The only explanation left is the use of those long
feathers."Not only this, but the ancient humans appeared to have a
preference for birds with dark or black plumage. Species represented at
the sites include ravens, crows, rooks, magpies, jackdaws, various types
of eagle and vulture, red and black kites, kestrels and falcons.
Speaking to me at this year's Calpe conference in Gibraltar, Prof
Finlayson explained: "What all this suggests to us is that Neanderthals
had the cognitive abilities to think in symbolic terms. The feathers
were almost certainly being used for ornamental purposes, and this is a
quite unbelievable thing to find." For much of the last century,
Neanderthals were portrayed as knuckle-dragging brutes, whose extinction
some 30,000 years ago was the natural outcome of competing against a
more intelligent, creative and resourceful human species - Homo sapiens.
In recent years, the Neanderthals who lived across Europe, the Middle
East and Central Asia in Pleistocene times - have come to be
rehabilitated amid mounting evidence that their abilities had been
underestimated. "I think this is the tip of the iceberg," said Prof
Finlayson: "It is showing that Neanderthals simply expressed themselves
in media other than cave walls. The last bastion of defence in favour of
our superiority was cognition."
Neanderthals, he said, may have been "different", but "their
processes of thinking were obviously very similar". Dr Negro cautioned
that there was no way to tell how the feathers were put to use. But he
observed: "Current uses of feathers typically involve the same species.
If you think of the Plains Indians in North America, they put those
feathers in headdresses and they are signalling.
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