This video is called Homo heidelbergensis.
From Sci-News.com:
Sep 17th, 2012
By Enrico de Lazaro
Homo heidelbergensis as skilled hunter
Archaeologists at the University of Tübingen suggest that eight extremely well-preserved wooden throwing spears found more than a decade ago in Germany may have been created and used by Homo heidelbergensis.
Between 1994 and 1998, Dr Hartmut Thieme of the Lower Saxony State Service for Cultural Heritage found the spears and other artifacts dating back 400,000 years in a open-cast lignite mine in Schöningen, Germany. The finds were described in the journal Nature.
Now, the team led by Prof Nicholas Conard and Dr Jordi Serangeli, both from the University of Tübingen’s Institute of Prehistory, continues the excavations at the site.
The archaeologists suggest that users of these artifacts were highly skilled craftsmen and hunters, well adapted to their environment – with a capacity for abstract thought and complex planning comparable to our own, and speculate that the most likely species was Homo heidelbergensis.
The traditional theory used to be that Neanderthals, later than Homo heidelbergensis, did not have throwing spears, only spears for stabbing; and that Homo sapiens, the present human species, first used throwing spears.
The bones of large mammals – elephants, rhinoceroses, horses and lions – as well as the remains of amphibians, reptiles, shells and even beetles have been preserved in the brown coal. Pines, firs, and black alder trees are preserved complete with pine cones, as have the leaves, pollen and seeds of surrounding flora.
Until the mining started at the site 30 years ago, these finds were below the water table. The archaeologists say they are now carrying out “underwater archaeology without the water.” Work continues almost all year round, and every day there is something new to document and recover.
Some of the most important finds from the site have been remains of a water buffalo, an almost completely preserved aurochs – one of the oldest in central Europe – and several concentrations of stone artifacts, bones and wood.
The scientists say Schöningen is an exciting location and global reference point not just for archaeology, but also for quaternary ecology and climate research.
See also here.
A study at the Universitat Rovira i Virgili and the Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution (IPHES) reveals that humans from the Upper Palaeolithic Age recycled their stone artefacts to be put to other uses. The study is based on burnt artefacts found in the Molí del Salt site in Tarragona, Spain: here.
Fascinating post!
I got interested in H. heidelbergensis a few years ago when my father found a hand axe in my sisters garden. I posted about it here ‘http://wp.me/p13aZN-3P’. I think the axe must have been used to butcher the mammoths and othe fauna killed for food by our ancestors.
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Hi, I have made your link clickable, at
http://thenaturephile.com/2010/11/16/prehistory/
Thanks for it!
Also on Homo heidelbergensis in Britain:
https://dearkitty1.wordpress.com/2006/07/01/england-signs-of-400000-years-old-elephant-eating-found/
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Thanks for the live link.
So maybe our handaxe had butchered elephant, rhino etc etc. It’s an amazing thought!
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If the handaxe was used for butchering an elephant, then maybe a species like Palaeoloxodon antiquus, mentioned in the article about England, rather than a “mammoth” in the well-known sense of the woolly mammoth, which became extinct “only” about 10,000 years ago.
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