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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNDid a Neanderthal Who Lived 43,000 Years Ago Paint a Red Nose on a Rock That Looked Like a Face?Roughly 43,000 years ago, a Neanderthal man dipped his finger in red ocher and painted a nose on a rock that looked like a ...
Neanderthals may have used a red pigment on a rock to shape what looks like art - a rendition of a facial figure from 43,000 ...
An ancient granite pebble included indentations resembling a face, its nose a red dot. A study says it may have had symbolic ...
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Scientists say they found one of the oldest known symbolic objects bearing a human fingerprint in Europe. The print hints at ...
A Neanderthal man is believed to have painted a nose on a pebble using red pigment more than 43,000 years ago.
The discovery could deepen our understanding of the Neanderthal mind, but some experts aren’t convinced by the interpretation ...
A face-shaped pebble marked with a red dot that was discovered in a Spanish cave may be proof that Neanderthals engaged in ...
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Discover Magazine on MSNA Neanderthal Fingerprint Points to Art, and Possibly Portraiture, Around 43,000 Years AgoLearn more about one of the oldest possible art pieces with a fingerprint from Europe, which may represent a human face.
Archaeologists in Spain have unearthed a 43,000-year-old pebble bearing a Neanderthal fingerprint, potentially the oldest ...
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Live Science on MSN43,000-year-old human fingerprint is world's oldest — and made by a NeanderthalThe discovery of a 43,000-year-old fingerprint in Spain is challenging the idea that Neanderthals were not capable of ...
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ScienceAlert on MSNThis May Be The World's Oldest Human Fingerprint, And That's Not AllAround 43,000 years ago, a Neanderthal dipped their finger in ocher and stamped the very center of a pebble. This one small ...
In the depths of the San Lázaro rock-shelter in Segovia, Central Spain, archaeologists from the Complutense University of ...
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