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New Dating Technique Reveals Ancient Spears in Germany Were Crafted by Neanderthals, Not Homo Heidelbergensis

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<p data-start&equals;"358" data-end&equals;"710">SCHÖNINGEN&comma; Germany — Wooden hunting spears discovered more than two decades ago in northern Germany — once thought to predate the Neanderthals — have now been re-dated to 200&comma;000 years ago&comma; placing them squarely within the era of early Neanderthals and reshaping our understanding of their intelligence&comma; coordination&comma; and social structure&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"712" data-end&equals;"959">The weapons&comma; long believed to be the handiwork of <em data-start&equals;"762" data-end&equals;"784">Homo heidelbergensis<&sol;em>&comma; have instead emerged as evidence of sophisticated Neanderthal tool use&comma; following a new biochemical dating analysis using fossilized snail shells found at the same site&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote data-start&equals;"961" data-end&equals;"1171">&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"963" data-end&equals;"1171">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Schöningen was always an archaeological anomaly&comma;” said Olaf Jöris&comma; archaeologist at the Leibniz Center for Archaeology and co-author of the new study&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Now we know it fits into the larger Neanderthal story&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<h2 data-start&equals;"1173" data-end&equals;"1208">Reassessing a Landmark Discovery<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"1210" data-end&equals;"1539">The Schöningen spears&comma; found in the late 1990s in an open-pit lignite mine&comma; are among the oldest preserved wooden weapons ever unearthed&period; Carved from spruce and pine and measuring between six and eight feet long&comma; they were discovered alongside the fossilized remains of dozens of horses — almost certainly their prey&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"1541" data-end&equals;"1890">For years&comma; the age of these spears was based on sedimentary layers&comma; which placed the site at between 300&comma;000 and 400&comma;000 years old&period; That estimation seemed to predate the emergence of Neanderthals and suggested attribution to <em data-start&equals;"1770" data-end&equals;"1792">Homo heidelbergensis<&sol;em>&comma; an extinct hominin species regarded as a common ancestor of both Neanderthals and modern humans&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"1892" data-end&equals;"2168">However&comma; new research published in <em data-start&equals;"1929" data-end&equals;"1947">Science Advances<&sol;em> leverages amino acid racemization&comma; a method of dating fossilized organic material by the breakdown of proteins in snail shells&comma; to deliver a much younger and more archaeologically coherent age of 200&comma;000 years&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote data-start&equals;"2170" data-end&equals;"2428">&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"2172" data-end&equals;"2428">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;It’s a bit disappointing when you make sites younger rather than older&comma;” said Kirsty Penkman&comma; a geochemist at the University of York and co-lead on the study&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;But the results make far more sense in light of what we know about early Neanderthal behavior&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"2172" data-end&equals;"2428"><img class&equals;"aligncenter size-full wp-image-12510" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;budgyapp&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2025&sol;05&sol;Schoningen-spears-Neanderthal-hunting-tools-Germany-archaeology-200000-years&period;jpg" alt&equals;"Schöningen spears Neanderthal hunting tools Germany archaeology 200000 years" width&equals;"676" height&equals;"356" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2 data-start&equals;"2430" data-end&equals;"2472">What It Means for Neanderthal Cognition<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"2474" data-end&equals;"2764">The updated dating firmly places the spears within the Middle Paleolithic period&comma; a transformative era in human evolution characterized by the emergence of cooperative hunting&comma; complex tool use&comma; and group-based social behavior — all traits increasingly associated with Neanderthals&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote data-start&equals;"2766" data-end&equals;"2900">&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"2768" data-end&equals;"2900">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;This isn’t a lone hunter scenario&comma;” said Jöris&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;This is organized&comma; strategic hunting — a group pooling risk&comma; planning&comma; executing&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"2902" data-end&equals;"3283">Far from the brutish caricatures of early 20th-century anthropology&comma; Neanderthals are now recognized for their growing mental sophistication&period; The spears&&num;8217&semi; aerodynamic design and size suggest they were used as thrusting and throwing weapons&comma; requiring knowledge of ballistics and craftsmanship to construct — and perhaps even language or symbolic thought to coordinate hunts&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2 data-start&equals;"3285" data-end&equals;"3344">Scientific Debate Persists — But the Picture Is Shifting<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"3346" data-end&equals;"3657">Despite strong support for the revised dating&comma; not all experts are ready to abandon the older timeline&period; Some&comma; including archaeologist Thomas Terberger of Georg August University of Göttingen&comma; argue that the transition from <em data-start&equals;"3569" data-end&equals;"3591">Homo heidelbergensis<&sol;em> to Neanderthals may not have been as sharp as previously thought&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote data-start&equals;"3659" data-end&equals;"3799">&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"3661" data-end&equals;"3799">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Was there a big difference in hunting strategies between late <em data-start&equals;"3724" data-end&equals;"3741">heidelbergensis<&sol;em> and early Neanderthals&quest; I’m not so sure&comma;” Terberger said&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"3801" data-end&equals;"4037">Still&comma; most researchers welcome the updated view&period; Andrzej Wi&sacute;niewski of the University of Wroc&lstrok;aw called the dating &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;very convincing” and noted that it fits well with emerging evidence of early Neanderthal innovation across Eurasia&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2 data-start&equals;"4039" data-end&equals;"4080">A Turning Point in Prehistoric Studies<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"4082" data-end&equals;"4431">The Schöningen site has long puzzled archaeologists due to the extraordinary preservation of its artifacts — something rare for organic material from so far back in time&period; The marshy conditions of the site helped preserve wood and bone that would typically rot&comma; offering a unique snapshot of life and death in a Middle Paleolithic hunting ground&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote data-start&equals;"4433" data-end&equals;"4593">&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"4435" data-end&equals;"4593">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;We’re seeing the beginning of strategic&comma; socially driven behavior&comma;” said Jöris&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The shift in dating helps us contextualize that turning point in evolution&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p data-start&equals;"4595" data-end&equals;"4913">With the debate over the spears’ origins gradually settling&comma; researchers now turn their attention to what the Schöningen find can teach us about tool production&comma; group behavior&comma; and the spread of Neanderthals across Ice Age Europe — a time when the human story was just beginning to diverge into its many branches&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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