logo
With the touch of a finger, a Neanderthal may have made art

With the touch of a finger, a Neanderthal may have made art

NBC News28-05-2025
Researchers in Spain say they have found evidence that Neanderthals were capable of creating art — challenging the idea that art began with the modern humans who succeeded them.
The canvas was a quartz-rich granite pebble that was excavated from a rock shelter in central Spain in 2022, in a layer dating back between 42,000 and 43,000 years. Measuring more than 8 inches long, the pebble has curves and indentations that make it resemble a human face.
In the middle of its surface is a single red dot, right where a nose would be, researchers said in a study published Saturday in the journal Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, adding that it appeared to be a non-utilitarian object rather than a tool.
'From the outset we could tell it was peculiar,' said David Álvarez-Alonso, lead author of the paper.
Analysis showed that the red dot consisted of ochre, a natural earth pigment. The next step was to determine how it got there.
While not visible to the naked eye, the red dot was confirmed by Spanish forensic police to be a fingerprint, leaving 'no doubt' that it was applied to the stone intentionally by a finger dipped in ochre, Álvarez-Alonso said in an email on Tuesday.
The researchers postulate that the Neanderthal, who based on the fingerprint was possibly an adult male, perceived the pebble as resembling a face — a psychological phenomenon known as pareidolia — and was inspired to complete the depiction, creating 'one of the oldest known abstractions of a human face in the prehistoric record.'
'It would be a clear act of symbolization — apparently very simple, yet meaningful,' Álvarez-Alonso said.
The discovery is 'doubly exceptional' since it's the 'most complete' Neanderthal fingerprint identified to date, apart from a partial one previously found in Germany, the researchers said.
Neanderthals, a distinct species that went extinct around 40,000 years ago, lived alongside early modern humans in Europe, Asia and the Middle East for at least part of their existence. Characterized by a large nose and relatively short and stocky bodies, the species is very closely related to humans, or Homo sapiens.
The remains of Neanderthals do not show clear evidence of lower intelligence than modern humans, some scientists have argued.
The stone is 'one of a small but growing number of discoveries that point to the existence of symbolic behavior among Neanderthals,' Álvarez-Alonso said.
However, it's 'clearly an isolated object, with no known parallels' that can be used for comparison, he added.
'We should not try to draw direct analogies between the Neanderthal and sapiens worlds,' Álvarez-Alonso said, as Neanderthals did not create a visual symbolic system as complex and diverse as the one developed by Homo sapiens.
'This pebble doesn't solve the mystery, but it offers one more clue suggesting the presence of a complex mind — one capable of producing symbols,' he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Human BBC: who is the presenter on BBC Two?
Human BBC: who is the presenter on BBC Two?

Scotsman

time2 days ago

  • Scotsman

Human BBC: who is the presenter on BBC Two?

Human is a five-part series that is airing on BBC Two 📺 Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Human charts 'our incredible story across 300,000 years'. The show examines how we went from being just one of many types of human to the dominant form of life on the planet. But who is the presenter and where have you seen her before? The curtain is being lifted on the epic story of humanity in a brand new BBC series. It charts our species first emergence through to becoming the sole humans on earth across 300,000 years. Based on breakthroughs in DNA technology and remarkable fossil evidence, the show explains how the lives of our ancestors shaped who we are today. It also explores the stories of the other human species - like Neanderthals - and the role we played in their demise. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Human continues with another brand new episode tonight (July 21) at 9pm on BBC Two. The full series is also available to watch on iPlayer right now. Who presents Human on BBC? Paleoanthropologist Ella Al-Shamahi presents Human on BBC Two | BBC Studios The five-part documentary series is presented by paleoanthropologist Ella Al-Shamahi. The academic is also described as an explorer and has worked as a writer as well as a stand-up comic. Speaking about Human, Ella said: 'I hope they see how absolutely remarkable and unlikely our story is – it boggles my mind and it takes my breath away and I hope they feel the same way. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Human is a five-part series on BBC Two | BBC 'I hope they feel something too – we went to the ends of the Earth to tell this story, we wanted to walk in our ancestors' footprints and honestly the ancients sometimes made that easy for us. At one point we went to one of the most exciting sites in the Americas – the actual footprints of what is likely a mother and child, in New Mexico. 'They are probably amongst the very first Americans – you can see from the pressure in the footprints that at times she picks the child up, sometimes on the right hip, sometimes on the left. To get to see snapshots in time like this it's so emotive… and human.' What has Human's presenter done before? Ella Al-Shamahi might not yet be the kind of household name that someone like David Attenborough or Brain Cox are - but she has had plenty of presenting experience prior to Human. She was the host of Neanderthals - Meet Your Ancestors in 2018. Prior to this BBC Two series, Ella's most recent presenting gig was with Channel 4's What Killed the Whale? It explored why whales wash up and die on UK beaches every year. If you love TV, check out our Screen Babble podcast to get the latest in TV and film.

Human BBC: who is the presenter on BBC Two?
Human BBC: who is the presenter on BBC Two?

Scotsman

time2 days ago

  • Scotsman

Human BBC: who is the presenter on BBC Two?

Human is a five-part series that is airing on BBC Two 📺 Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Human charts 'our incredible story across 300,000 years'. The show examines how we went from being just one of many types of human to the dominant form of life on the planet. But who is the presenter and where have you seen her before? The curtain is being lifted on the epic story of humanity in a brand new BBC series. It charts our species first emergence through to becoming the sole humans on earth across 300,000 years. Based on breakthroughs in DNA technology and remarkable fossil evidence, the show explains how the lives of our ancestors shaped who we are today. It also explores the stories of the other human species - like Neanderthals - and the role we played in their demise. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Human continues with another brand new episode tonight (July 21) at 9pm on BBC Two. The full series is also available to watch on iPlayer right now. Who presents Human on BBC? Paleoanthropologist Ella Al-Shamahi presents Human on BBC Two | BBC Studios The five-part documentary series is presented by paleoanthropologist Ella Al-Shamahi. The academic is also described as an explorer and has worked as a writer as well as a stand-up comic. Speaking about Human, Ella said: 'I hope they see how absolutely remarkable and unlikely our story is – it boggles my mind and it takes my breath away and I hope they feel the same way. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Human is a five-part series on BBC Two | BBC 'I hope they feel something too – we went to the ends of the Earth to tell this story, we wanted to walk in our ancestors' footprints and honestly the ancients sometimes made that easy for us. At one point we went to one of the most exciting sites in the Americas – the actual footprints of what is likely a mother and child, in New Mexico. 'They are probably amongst the very first Americans – you can see from the pressure in the footprints that at times she picks the child up, sometimes on the right hip, sometimes on the left. To get to see snapshots in time like this it's so emotive… and human.' What has Human's presenter done before? Ella Al-Shamahi might not yet be the kind of household name that someone like David Attenborough or Brain Cox are - but she has had plenty of presenting experience prior to Human. She was the host of Neanderthals - Meet Your Ancestors in 2018. Prior to this BBC Two series, Ella's most recent presenting gig was with Channel 4's What Killed the Whale? It explored why whales wash up and die on UK beaches every year.

Human review: The BBC's touchy-feely new series reminds us how our ancestors put the human in humanity
Human review: The BBC's touchy-feely new series reminds us how our ancestors put the human in humanity

Scotsman

time5 days ago

  • Scotsman

Human review: The BBC's touchy-feely new series reminds us how our ancestors put the human in humanity

At times during the BBC's new landmark documentary series Human (BBC2, Mon, 9pm), the evolution of our species sounds like a particularly uncomfortable family wedding. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Paleoanthropologist Ella Al-Shamahi describes some of the human species that our own homo sapiens shared the earth with hundreds of thousands of years ago. There was homo erectus – the first to leave Africa; Neanderthals, adapted for cold weather and expert hunters; and homo floresiensis, were about three-and-a-half feet tall and have been tagged as The Hobbit in anthropological circles. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Al-Shamahi evokes the Lord of the Rings, but it is that wedding that comes more readily to mind, one of those dos when you meet distant cousins and great aunts for the first time in decades and wonder how on earth you can be related to them. Ella Al-Shamahi takes us on a fascinating journey into the past to meet our ancestors in the BBC's new series Human (Picture: BBC/BBC Studios) But this illuminating series also has resonances with the present day, as Al-Shamahi draws a picture of homo sapiens as a 'connected and co-operative species', one which talked with other groups and learned from them. Looking at the headlines today, you'd be hard-pressed to divine where that interconnectedness has gone. But this is more than a parable for how we should all get along or swap shell bracelets. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It's one of those series – like most of Prof Brian Cox's TV lectures – which is full of sweeping shots across deserts and broiling sulphur pits and red-hued mountains. There's lots of Al-Shamahi walking across a barren landscape into the sunset. And there are living, moving dioramas of people posing as our ancestors as they herd goats through the dust. Ella Al-Shamahi holds a cast of one of the early homo sapiens skulls found at Jebel Irhoud, in Morocco, in the BBC's new series Human (Picture: BBC/BBC Studios) Human is never far away from trying to forge an emotional connection with those early humans too, as Al-Shamahi imagines encounters with these distant ancestors. 'If we were to look into their eyes, into those quite delicate features,' she gushes, 'would we see ourselves within them?' All of this touch-feelyness, however, can't obscure the general jaw-dropping nature of the whole thing – not least the massive twists of fate and fortune that led to you, and me, and them, being here, together. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad There are new breakthroughs to suggest that East Africa was not the cradle of civilisation it was thought to be, but that homo sapiens developed across Africa, spreading and intermingling and co-operating in such a way as to ensure our survival above the other human species. A Herto 1 skull cast alongside other skull fossils in the BBC's new series Human (Picture: BBC/BBC Studios) Similarly, there is evidence that on a mountain in what is now Israel, homo sapiens and Neanderthals lived in neighbouring caves. 'We don't know if they interacted,' says Al-Shamahi, but it sounds like a pitch for a good sitcom. Meanwhile, we see how the ability to think in the abstract, to see snakes caught in the rocks, to offer gifts and to make art showed the development of the human brain to see beyond the concrete and come up with new advances. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Much of it is mind-boggling, not only because of the sheer amount of knowledge being dropped on, but the whole sweeping vastness of time thing. But it looks fantastic, keeps a light touch with its learning, and Al-Shamahi is an engaging, passionate presenter who looks like she could do for skulls and beads what Cox did for moon rocks and sunspots. And, more importantly, it brings our ancestors into sharper focus – their way of being 'connected and co-operative' - and makes you think that maybe they had the right idea in the first place. If we can get along at that wedding, why not try it in the wider world?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store