MONREPOS Archaeological Research Center and Museum for Human Behavioral Evolution, Schloss Monrepos, Neuwied 56567, Germany (LEIZA).
Institute of Ancient Studies, Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Schönborner Hof, Schillerstraße 11, Mainz 55116, Germany.
Sci Adv. 2023 Feb 3;9(5):eadd8186. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.add8186. Epub 2023 Feb 1.
Straight-tusked elephants () were the largest terrestrial mammals of the Pleistocene, present in Eurasian landscapes between 800,000 and 100,000 years ago. The occasional co-occurrence of their skeletal remains with stone tools has generated rich speculation about the nature of interactions between these elephants and Pleistocene humans: Did hominins scavenge on elephants that died a natural death or maybe even hunt some individuals? Our archaeozoological study of the largest assemblage known, excavated from 125,000-year-old lake deposits in Germany, shows that hunting of elephants weighing up to 13 metric tons was part of the cultural repertoire of Last Interglacial Neanderthals there, over >2000 years, many dozens of generations. The intensity and nutritional yields of these well-documented butchering activities, combined with previously reported data from this Neumark-Nord site complex, suggest that Neanderthals were less mobile and operated within social units substantially larger than commonly envisaged.
直獠牙象()是更新世最大的陆生哺乳动物,存在于 80 万至 10 万年前的欧亚大陆景观中。它们的骨骼遗骸偶尔与石器一起出现,这引发了人们对这些大象与更新世人类之间相互作用性质的丰富猜测:人类是否会在大象自然死亡时进行食腐,或者甚至会猎捕一些个体?我们对在德国挖掘的已知最大的组合(来自 125000 年前的湖泊沉积物)进行了考古动物学研究,结果表明,对重达 13 公吨的大象进行狩猎是那里的末次间冰期尼安德特人文化组合的一部分,持续了 >2000 年,涉及数十代人。这些有充分记录的屠宰活动的强度和营养收益,加上之前从这个诺伊马克-诺德遗址复合体报告的数据,表明尼安德特人移动性较差,并且在社会单位内运作,规模比通常设想的要大得多。