Stories tagged early man

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Ancient wall art at Cave at Lascaux, France: Was music used here to soothe the savage breast?
Ancient wall art at Cave at Lascaux, France: Was music used here to soothe the savage breast?
Courtesy Thag the caveman
Do you enjoy hearing your favorite rock group perform their ear-splitting music in a huge cavernous concert arena with flashing colored lights and giant video imagery? Or listening to hymns and spirituals bounce off the vaulted ceiling of a church full of colorful stained-glassed windows and religious icons? Well, I’ve got news for you. It could be you’re attracted to such things by a deep-seated urge to mix echoing music and art; a practice mankind has apparently been doing since the Stone Age. At least according to a new theory coming out of the University of Paris.

Professor Iegor Reznikoff, a specialist in the resonance of building and spaces, theorizes that the most resonant areas of prehistoric-era caves are also the locations where most of the cave wall paintings appear.

Reznikoff stumbled upon the idea by accident.

"The first time I happened to be in a prehistoric cave, I tried the resonance in various parts of the cave, and quickly the question arose: Is there a relation between resonance and locations of the paintings?"

Reznikoff tested his theory inside various well-known French caves where prehistoric art adorned the walls. As he moved about each space, singing and humming, Reznikoff measured where the optimum resonance occurred.

To his surprise, the most resonant areas of each cave were usually spots where most of the cave art was concentrated. And where the resonance was the greatest, the artwork was the densest. In smaller spaces, such as narrow passages between larger cavern rooms where painting would have been difficult, the walls were marked with red lines.

Bear Bone Flute: Neanderthal-aged flute made from bear's femur
Bear Bone Flute: Neanderthal-aged flute made from bear's femur
Courtesy Wikipedia
It occurred to Reznikoff that perhaps a cave’s acoustics was important to prehistoric culture, and may be the reason why primitive musical instruments, such as a Neanderthal flute made out of the femur of a bear, have been found in similar caves.

"The [prehistoric] tribes could make sounds with stones, pieces of wood, different types of drums and so on," Reznikoff says. "Of course the Paleolithic tribes did sing, as do all cultural groups from other regions. That they did so in the caves is shown by my studies. The ritual purpose appears very convincing."

This may explain why the popularity of cavernous concert halls, and large arena music performances, or even subterranean music clubs continue to be popular to this day. Perhaps the ancestral effects of long ago cave rituals still resonate in us.

LINKS
Story at ScienceDaily
Listen to the Bear Bone Flute

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Homo habilis skull: Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons and licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and Creative Commons Attribution 2.5.
Homo habilis skull: Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons and licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License and Creative Commons Attribution 2.5.
New fossils found in East Africa are challenging current thought about the relationship between two human ancestors, Homo habilis and Homo erectus.

The two species of hominids had previously been thought to have evolved one from the other (H. erectus from H. habilis), but the new evidence appears to show they co-existed in the same lake region for more than half a million years.

A broken upper jawbone from H. habilis and an intact H. erectus skull were uncovered in the Kenya’s Turkana basin area, and date back to about 1.44 million years and 1.55 million years respectively. Geologists used radiometric dating of volcanic ash deposits to determine the age of the remains. The H. habilis fossil is the youngest of that species ever found.

"Their co-existence makes it unlikely that Homo erectus evolved from Homo habilis," said co-author Professor Meave Leakey, paleontologist the Koobi Fora Research Project. She and her paleontologist daughter, Louise, are co-directors of the research organization.

The fossils were found in 2000 but went through extensive preparation and study before the results were published.

The erectus skull contains the distinctive cranium ridge, and jaw and teeth features found in the species, but the skull’s small size baffles the researchers.

“What is truly striking about this fossil is its size,” said professor Fred Spoor who co-authored the paper. “It is the smallest Homo erectus found thus far anywhere in the world.”

Spoor, a professor of developmental biology at University London College, dismissed that the smaller size could be due to it being from an under-developed specimen.

"By studying how the skull bones are fused together we discovered it belonged to a fully grown young adult rather than a developing juvenile erectus," he said.

Sexual dimorphism (the size disparity between the male and female of a species) could be a factor in the skull’s size, but would mean all other erectus remains found until now have all been male. Some scientists not involved in the study think this may be the case.

With the two hominids inhabiting the same region for such a long a time and still remaining separate suggests the two species didn’t compete directly for resources.

Spoor conjectured on the possibility that an isolated population of Homo habilis living in another part of Africa away from the Turkana basin may have evolved into Homo erectus.

"But that is a much more complex proposition," Spoor said. "The easiest way to interpret these fossils is that there was an ancestral species that gave rise to both of them somewhere between two and three million years ago."

The researchers’ results appeared in the science journal Nature.

SOURCES

New York Times website
BBC Website