Posted on 03/16/2004 1:59:41 PM PST by blam
Early human marks are 'symbols'
By Paul Rincon
BBC News Online science staff
The 1.4-1.2m-year-old bone is incised with man-made markings
A series of parallel lines engraved in an animal bone between 1.4 and 1.2 million years ago may be the earliest example of human symbolic behaviour. University of Bordeaux experts say no practical process, such as butchering a carcass, can explain the markings.
But many researchers believe the capacity for true symbolic thinking arose much later with the emergence of modern humans, Homo sapiens.
The 8cm-long bone was unearthed at the Kozarnika cave in north-west Bulgaria.
Another animal bone found at the site is incised with 27 marks along its edge.
"These lines were not from butchering; in this place (on the animal) there is nothing to cut. It can't be anything else than symbolism," Dr Jean-Luc Guadelli, of the University of Bordeaux, France, told BBC News Online.
'Precise markings'
When early humans butchered animal carcasses for meat, they left cut marks on the bones made by the stone tools they used to scrape away the flesh.
But the French and Bulgarian researchers who have been excavating at Kozarnika claim the parallel cuts on the bones are too precise to be the result of hacking at the animal to strip away meat.
There's no precedent for this at all, if in fact they are incised markings rather than butchery marks
Paul Bahn, ancient art expert
"Now, what is the meaning of these symbols? It is impossible to know. But they put on this bone something they wanted to explain: 'I saw 16 animals in this place'. It could be something like language."
Many researchers see the capacity for symbolism in humans as something that only became widespread after about 50,000 years ago in our own species. Therefore, evidence of this capacity in an earlier species of human is highly controversial.
"There's no precedent for this at all - if in fact they are incised markings rather than butchery marks. This would be a very welcome thing if it's confirmed," Paul Bahn, an expert in ancient art, told BBC News Online.
"I see a very long evolution for art and I see absolutely no credence in the view whatsoever that it magically appears with our sub-species through a genetic mutation," he added.
Back and forth
Dr Guadelli and his colleagues have discovered a human molar tooth of a similar age to the incised bones. It belongs to a species of early Homo, but the researchers are unsure of the exact species.
HUMAN FAMILY TREE
Scientists are trying to piece together the species relationships
A good candidate would be Homo erectus, a species of hominid that was spreading beyond its homeland in Africa at the time the bone markings were made.
The incised bone seems to have belonged to an unknown bovid mammal, the group that includes sheep, cattle and antelope.
It comes from ground layers dated using palaeomagnetism, which determines age using past patterns of reversals in the Earth's magnetic field.
Details of the excavations have been outlined at a symposium in Rennes, France. The findings are to be published soon in an English-language archaeological journal.
Picture courtesy of Aleta Guadelli
Like this unknown bovid mammal?
I could be wrong, but I think those markings mean something like, "F15 596."
That would be my bet.
Or a form of primitive "doodling", which I would expect would pre-date actual *symbolic* markings by many millennia.
There is zero reason to believe that men have not always been men, always the same in any innate respect, and in the most important respect always knowing right from wrong.
The fascination of examining men and the evidence of man's existence is how exactly alike we prove to be, in any essential aspect.
Seems alot of that has taken place over the years.
I'm always amazed how they underestimate our ancestors. But most proffs are liberals with the firm belief that there is no wisdom in the ages and the age of "human enlightenment" occurred in the 1960's.
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