Skip to content
thelocalreport.in thelocalreport.in

Thelocalreport.in is a news website which includes national international,#sports,#wealth,#weather, #entertainment and other types of news.

  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • World
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
thelocalreport.in
thelocalreport.in

Thelocalreport.in is a news website which includes national international,#sports,#wealth,#weather, #entertainment and other types of news.

400,000-year-old giant skeleton solves mystery of early humans

KANIKA SINGH RATHORE, 14/10/202514/10/2025

Add thelocalreport.in As A Trusted Source

Sign up for our free Health Check email to get exclusive analysis on Health of the Week

Receive our free health check email

Receive our free health check email

One spring, after a long winter, an old elephant lay dying on the banks of a small river near the coast of what is now northern Italy. Soon after, some scavengers arrived to dine on this vast store of food.

More than 400,000 years later, one of the elephant tusks has been unearthed in construction activities at Castle Lumbroso on the outskirts of Rome, prompting archaeological excavations to investigate the immediate surroundings.

A newly published study led by Anja Spinapolis and Francesca Alhaik provides information not only about the elephant’s death, but, perhaps more interestingly, about the lives of the scavengers who eat it.

These sweepers were not hyenas. They were a strange species of bipedal primate – early nomadic humans, who lived Europe At a time when people built houses or even lit fires, those who stayed for a short time sought to benefit from this unexpected windfall.

The discovery is a successful example of how archaeological heritage management can be integrated within development and construction activities. Since 1992, a European-wide treaty makes it mandatory European Union Nations must protect their archaeological heritage. But each country can decide for itself how to do so.

Elephant bones and a sketch of their outline in Castle Lumbroso, near Rome

Elephant bones and a sketch of their outline in Castle Lumbroso, near Rome ,Macozzi et al., 2025, PLoS One, CC BY,

In my native Netherlands, the mere discovery of an animal fossil does not necessarily lead to excavation. Therefore such a site can be easily destroyed without being noticed.

But in the case of the elephant, Roman archaeological superintendence went beyond the bounds of duty. They conducted an ambitious research project that revealed – and solved – a complex puzzle of early human behavior: what exactly did these nomadic scavengers do with this animal’s body?

ALSO READ  Nobel Prize in Physics is to be announced on Tuesday

Solving a 400,000-year-old puzzle

Four million years ago, humans were few in number in Europe, but were probably most abundant on the shores of the Mediterranean. Their fossils are extremely rare, but there are skulls from Sima de los Huesos (literally “pit of bones”) and Swanscombe in northern Spain. England Show that people around at this time were early Neanderthal,

Lucky for us, they left behind more than just their skeletons. We can also study their tools, which have been recovered across large parts of Europe – from the north to the south of England.

The river where the Castle Lumbroso elephant died was carrying ash from a volcanic eruption that can be accurately estimated at 404,000 years ago – so the elephant must have died after this. But the condition of the sediments suggests that the ash deposits were from a warmer period 395,000 years ago. From that point on, cold conditions began to prevail.

So, this puzzle for archaeologists was posed in a very narrow (from the archaeological point of view) time segment.

About the author

Gerrit Dusseldorp is Associate Professor of Stone Age Archeology at Leiden University.

This article is republished from Conversation Under Creative Commons license. read the original article,

In these warm periods, Italy was inhabited by a fascinating community of animals, including wolves, lions, hyenas, hippos and rhinoceros. But only elephants with straight teeth were beautiful. This species was much larger than the African elephant and was a true ecosystem engineer, opening up landscapes that would otherwise have been densely forested, thereby improving the productivity of many other species.

ALSO READ  New mortgage strength rules promote housing sales immediately

This particular animal was in its late 40s – about as old as an elephant. It may have got stuck in the mud on the river bank and died a natural death. We know this happened in other places too – for example, at Poggetti Vecchi in Tuscany, where seven elephants died in a hot spring and were later partially butchered. At Castle Lumbroso, we also know the season in which the elephant died: fallen red deer and fallow deer antlers suggest it was spring.

Humans moving across the landscape in small groups would naturally be attracted to this mountain of flesh. While the elephant bones do not show the distinctive cut-marks produced by cutting and chiseling, they do show hammer marks and were found next to several small flint tools.

We can see that people opened some bones by hitting them with a hammer, probably for the fat marrow inside. But they also used the bones to make tools. This is unusual behavior that has only been documented on a few other sites.

In most cases, it seems that early Neanderthals preferred to make their tools from flint and we suspect that other materials such as wood are also rarely preserved for us. Making bone tools is sometimes seen as a technologically complex behavior, indicating modern-like intelligence.

I think the explanation is simple: we rarely find them because they are more likely to decay than stone tools. Their use in Castle Lumbroso may have been a matter of “necessities”.

Elephant bones in Castle Lumbroso

Elephant bones in Castle Lumbroso ,Elephant bones in Castle Lumbroso,

After all, the ancient Italian environment may have been beautiful, and people depended on good stones for their tools, but it had one serious drawback: flint was only available as very small pebbles.

ALSO READ  State pension age change can affect an age group the most, experts reveal

The technology of these humans was not as sophisticated as that of the “classic” Neanderthals of later times, who distilled birch tar, gave wooden handles to stone tools, and regularly lit fires – all of which we do not see in such ancient times. This group was so versatile that it not only modified its technological repertoire to make very small flint tools, but also explored using other materials such as elephant bone.

They adapted smaller flints using the “bipolar technique” – a technique already in evidence at the first archaeological site of Lomekwi, 3.3 million years old in Kenya. In this, the stone you want to peel has to be placed on the anvil of a larger stone, then the top of it has to be hit with another stone. This splits the pebble into two pieces and sharp pieces can be prepared from here.

Some of the flint tool edges found at Castle Lumbroso were old enough to be analyzed for microscopic traces of their prehistoric use. They indicate use on a softer material, which could mean cutting elephant meat – although it could also be due to other things.

These early Neanderthals also had more complex technological arsenals. They brought to the site a hand axe, which was carved on (and from) a large block of limestone – not the best material for tools as it is quite soft, but still suitable for making this large tool type.

Possessing only imperfect stones – either too small or too soft – this group also understood the potential of mammoth elephant bones for turning them into tools. They broke some bones and shaped them by scraping the bone with a hammer stone, in the same way they worked flint.

Perhaps for only a few hours, the sounds of flint striking an anvil, the sounds of bones breaking and the excited screams of people filled with a rich source of food would have filled the air. These early people would then have moved on again, perhaps to find a suitable place for the night.

Uk 400000yearoldEarlygiantHumansMysteryskeletonsolves

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Follow Us On Google News

  • Nine killed in fire in chemical warehouse and textile factory in Bangladesh
  • 400,000-year-old giant skeleton solves mystery of early humans
  • Cow stampede at railway station causing delays across Wales
  • Findings from an AP investigation into ICE’s use of full-body restraint devices, known as WRAP
  • Sarina Wigman: I will always be ‘grateful’ to England’s retired Millie Bright
  • ICE’s use of full-body restraints during deportations raises concerns over inhumane treatment
  • India to resume all international postal services to US from October 15
  • Taylor Swift announces her Erasure tour documentary – here’s when you can watch it
  • Listen: Trump’s private conversation about son Eric caught on hot mic
  • Diwali 2025 in Ayodhya: Preparation for Deepotsav 2025 with 22 tableaux, 5 foreign Ramlilas
  • Britain’s cyber security agency warns of ‘sophisticated’ threat from Chinese hackers
  • American Airlines plane drenched in fuel after employee loses control with hose
  • Delhi AQI today: GRAP 1 restrictions imposed in NCR due to deterioration in air quality
  • Carlos Santana Responds to Claims He Protested Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Show
  • Bihar Assembly Elections 2025: BJP announces 71 candidates; check full list
  • Update for Vodafone users after major outage
  • Another pre-budget blow for Reeves, Britain facing highest inflation in G7
  • Rapper accused of running on Kentucky highway and dancing on concrete barrier
  • The surprising habit that can improve the gut microbiome in eight weeks
  • Elijah Wilkes’ family says police shooting of their relative was ‘justified’
  • UP government announces Diwali Bonus 2025: Check how much state employees will get
  • Katy Perry references new romance on stage
  • Hurun U35 List 2025: These youngest entrepreneurs under 35 lead India’s new business wave
  • Tim Curry reveals the royal was a big fan of The Rocky Horror Picture Show
  • Husband and wife found dead in Cornwall home identified
  • How millions of car owners could be compensated after historic legal battle
  • UFC Champion Tom Aspinall Gives Strong Verdict on Fighting Friends Top 10
  • India’s young urban consumers lead global effort for climate action and social equity: Ingka Group report
  • ‘NDA is as strong as Pandavas’: Bihar BJP chief on list of candidates
  • This is why Bill Nelson thinks Musk should rethink his Mars plans
  • Need to change mindset, explore mediation: Law and Justice Ministry officials
  • Japan man sentenced to death for ‘brutal’ murder of four in 2023
  • Treatment of trans people risks breaching ECHR, UK warns
  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • World
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • World
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Add thelocalreport.in As A Trusted Source in Google

Canada News

  • How 'OK Blue Jays' became an eternal ballpark tradition in Toronto
    How ‘OK Blue Jays’ became an eternal ballpark tradition in Toronto
  • Durham College student barred from attending convocation because of religious symbol
    Durham College student barred from attending convocation because of religious symbol
  • 'Is that $75 million?': Ontario's biggest Lotto Max winner is in disbelief
    ‘Is that $75 million?’: Ontario’s biggest Lotto Max winner is in disbelief
  • Mug on Center Ice: Story of existence, mental health and redemption of former hockey enformers
    Mug on Center Ice: Story of existence, mental health and redemption of former hockey enformers
  • Students of Durham Kshetra High School speak after canceling Prom
    Students of Durham Kshetra High School speak after canceling Prom
  • Ford rejects the push of Ford mayers to keep speed cameras in Ontario
    Ford rejects the push of Ford mayers to keep speed cameras in Ontario

India News

  • India to resume all international postal services to US from October 15
    India to resume all international postal services to US from October 15
  • Diwali 2025 in Ayodhya: Preparation for Deepotsav 2025 with 22 tableaux, 5 foreign Ramlilas
    Diwali 2025 in Ayodhya: Preparation for Deepotsav 2025 with 22 tableaux, 5 foreign Ramlilas
  • Delhi AQI today: GRAP 1 restrictions imposed in NCR due to deterioration in air quality
    Delhi AQI today: GRAP 1 restrictions imposed in NCR due to deterioration in air quality
  • Bihar Assembly Elections 2025: BJP announces 71 candidates; check full list
    Bihar Assembly Elections 2025: BJP announces 71 candidates; check full list
  • UP government announces Diwali Bonus 2025: Check how much state employees will get
    UP government announces Diwali Bonus 2025: Check how much state employees will get
  • Hurun U35 List 2025: These youngest entrepreneurs under 35 lead India's new business wave
    Hurun U35 List 2025: These youngest entrepreneurs under 35 lead India’s new business wave

Us News

  • How a Faith-Based Gold Company Is Changing the Way Americans Protect Their Retirement (Ft. Dean Cain)
  • BREAKING: Silver Market – Silver rises above $52 for the first time in history!
  • HISTORICAL: President Trump signs Gaza peace deal – “It will last.”
  • President Trump signs personal message to the Knesset in Israel
  • Elon Musk has a two-word response to President Trump’s Gaza peace deal
  • WATCH: Hot mic captures hilarious conversation between presidents. Trump and PM Carney

Uk News

  • Nine killed in fire in chemical warehouse and textile factory in Bangladesh
    Nine killed in fire in chemical warehouse and textile factory in Bangladesh
  • 400,000-year-old giant skeleton solves mystery of early humans
    400,000-year-old giant skeleton solves mystery of early humans
  • Cow stampede at railway station causing delays across Wales
    Cow stampede at railway station causing delays across Wales
  • Findings from an AP investigation into ICE's use of full-body restraint devices, known as WRAP
    Findings from an AP investigation into ICE’s use of full-body restraint devices, known as WRAP
  • Sarina Wigman: I will always be 'grateful' to England's retired Millie Bright
    Sarina Wigman: I will always be ‘grateful’ to England’s retired Millie Bright
  • ICE's use of full-body restraints during deportations raises concerns over inhumane treatment
    ICE’s use of full-body restraints during deportations raises concerns over inhumane treatment
  • World
  • United States
  • India News
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • thelocalreport.in Company Details
  • Terms and Conditions
  • DNPA Code of Ethics
  • Correction Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Rss Feeds
©2025 thelocalreport.in | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes