An Ancient Hyena May Have Chomped Down on This Neanderthals Face

in archeology •  7 years ago 


About 65,000 years ago, a large carnivore — perhaps a cave hyena — chomped down on the face of a (likely dead) Neanderthal. Then, that carnivore partially digested two of the hominin’s teeth before regurgitating them, a new study suggests.


The finding overturns a previous analysis of the regurgitated teeth. Until now, scientists thought the incisors belonged to ancient cattle or deer, the study’s researchers said.


The reason for the mix-up is simple: When the large carnivore partially digested the teeth, the animal’s digestive juices altered the chompers’ shape, making them difficult to identify, Bruno Maureille, director of research at the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), in Paris, told Live Science.


Possible cannibalism


The two teeth were found at the archaeological site of Marillac (also known as Les Pradelles), near the village of Marillac-le-Franc in the west of France, during excavations lasting from 1965 to 1980.


This site has been a gold mine for anthropologists. During the Late Pleistocene, Neanderthals — which went extinct about 40,000 years ago and are modern human’s closest relative — used a cave there as a hunting camp, where they butchered animals before carting them off to another location to eat. In all, researchers have unearthed about 17,000 reindeer bones, as well as the bones of horses and bison at Marillac, the researchers said.



The archaeological site during an excavation in 2009. Credit: Copyright scientific team of Les Pradelles, CNRS. 


 In addition to butchered animal bones, the site also contains  Neanderthal bones that have similar butchery marks on them. These marks  could indicate that the Neanderthals there engaged in cannibalism,  Maureille said. Or it could be that the Neanderthals butchered the  hominin bones for rituals, or perhaps to practice butchery in general,  study co-researcher Alan Mann, a professor emeritus of anthropology at  Princeton University, told Live Science.Either way — that is,  whether or not Neanderthals cannibalized their peers — a Neanderthal’s  (or several Neanderthals’) toothy remains ended up on the cave floor,  where a large carnivore found and munched on them, the researchers said.“We  don’t know exactly what was going on, but [the Neanderthals] must have  left skulls or parts of the face there, because cave hyenas came in and  ate them,” Mann said. 

 The cave hyenas likely didn’t have a problem eating the thinner bones of  the face, but teeth are harder to digest, Mann said. So, the hyenas  likely regurgitated the teeth, whose shape the predators’ guts had  already altered. 


 Dangerous carnivore


The researchers noted that  if the carnivore was, in fact, a hyena, it wouldn’t have looked like a  modern variety. Rather, it would have been the larger, now-extinct hyena  that lived in ancient Europe, Maureille said.“At that time, it  was probably the most dangerous carnivore in Western Europe,” Maureille  said. “When you see the size of a hyena mandible, it is something that  is more than impressive.”The finding shines light on “new cases  of interaction between human and carnivores in Paleolithic times,” an  important discovery given that “humans and carnivores compete for the  same prey, shelter (caves and rock-shelters), territories, and  resources, Nohemi Sala, a postdoctoral researcher from the Joint Center  for Research into Human Evolution and Behaviour at the Complutense  University of Madrid, told Live Science in an email. Sala was not  involved in the study. 



 However, Sala noted that the study is based exclusively on the  teeth’s macroscopic features. “In the future, it would be interesting  [to employ] the use of microscopic techniques, such the scanning  electron microscope, to comparatively evaluate other agents responsible  [for] the surface modifications,” she said.This isn’t the first  evidence of an ancient hyena chowing down on a hominin. A hominin leg  bone found in a Moroccan cave has tooth marks on it that were likely  made by the ancient beast.The study was published in December in the journal Paleo. 


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Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://www.livescience.com/61664-neanderthal-teeth-digested-by-hyenas.html

Thanks for the post, always interesting to read about archeological finds.

You're welcome @mmo-mmo . Ye indeed it is interesting because we get to know more about the history of our planet :D

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