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Author Topic: Vogelherd fossils are dated to Neolithic  (Read 20200 times)
Daryl Habel
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« Reply #15 on: July 18, 2004, 10:20:51 PM »

Paul and Dar:

I guess that means that if the ivory horse from Vogelherd is (apparently) around 32,000 years old, but the human fossils are later, then the only reasonable explanation is an intrusive burial. And I don't have the impression that Neolithic art styles were, quite that "naturalistic".  Of course, I could be wrong. . . .
Anne G

Well, that about sums it up.  Paul's speculation that the Vogelherd horse might be Neolithic might have more merit (by presuming it and the other artworks slipped into the 32,000 year old stratum when the humans were buried) except for the fact that the same style of Aurignacian animal carvings are also found in pre-30,000 year old strata at several other localities in southern Germany (at Geissenklosterle, Hohlenstein, Hohle Fels, etc.).  And with no trace of Neolithic in those strata.  Only Aurignacian tools are associated with these other places.

It seems that to assume all these others at Geissenklosterle, Hohle Fels, etc. are also intrusive into the Aurignacian geological strata requires a much more tremendous stretch of imagination  than to just simply and parsimoniously assume that the Vogelherd Neolithic human fossils were buried intrusively.

Dar
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Daryl Habel
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Jacques Cinq-Mars
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« Reply #16 on: July 19, 2004, 10:39:36 AM »

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Older lithic industries sem to survive long after new ones have appeared. It is actually the case for most tools : even though electric powered planes used in wood work have been invented more that 40 years ago, hand held planes are still in use...

A few years ago I saw a great TV reportage on a small contemporary tribe in Papouasia which was still using acheulean tools. The grand father was teaching his grand children where to find appropriate flint nodules, how to chose the right ones and how to do flint knapping. It was extremely interesting, unfortunately, I haven't been able to retrieve the producer of the reportage.

This shows that stone industries can survive for very long periods...

On this, there should soon be a response to  Anthrostudies’ recent post(s) on these issues.

Quote
Back to the article, it would be important to know if the Aurignacian artefacts such as the Vogelherd ivory horse, were found in the same layers as the fossils dated between 3900 and 5000 bp described in the article. This would mean that human beings had either preserved through time or discovered Aurignacian artefacts and attributed to it an important value.

The other interesting question would be to know how the ivory statuette of the hose came into the posessions of thes mid Neolithic populations...

Paul.
Eager to know more about this story.

Paul,

I essentially agree with what Anne and Dar had to say about the issue at hand, and I’ll just come up with my own, short summary and a few additions.
 
A more reasonable, economic, likely, scientific explanation is that the human remains under discussion were stratigraphically intrusive. That such a situation was not initially recorded is perfectly understandable given that the original excavations that yielded the Stetten human remains were carried out at the beginning of the 20th century, in 1931, more than 80 years ago, in the days when detailed micro-stratigraphic analyses were not exactly part of the practitioners’ approaches to excavation.  As an aside, I should add that misreading of stratigraphic evidence can readily occur, even today. Anyway, I don’t have the example/reference in mind, but I recall that there has recently been at least one other case of rejuvenation of this type

To this, one can also add (also alluded to by Dar) that the Vogelherd figurines are now part of a steadily growing corpus of evidence, made of about 25 specimens, that, contextually, chronologically, and stylistically, exhibits what one might call an Aurignacian (Tradition) cultural integrity which, in turn, is a good match for other types of archaeological evidence from other regions. Take for example what has been said about Chauvet Cave faunal representations.

In other words, I don’t find it useful, in this particular case, to speculate or fantasize about long term (to the mid-Neolithic) palaeo-conservation or palaeo-museology.

Jacques




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Jacques Cinq-Mars
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« Reply #17 on: July 19, 2004, 10:44:42 AM »

All (interested in this particular topic),

In my earlier post, I neglected to mention that if further discussion on this topic keeps drifting away from actual human palaeontology, it should move to some more appropriate Board(s).

Jacques
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trehinp
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« Reply #18 on: July 19, 2004, 12:17:24 PM »

Thanks Dar, Anne and Jacques,

You have clarified very well the context of the discovery and the most likely explanations for the dating of the human fossils.

So, if I now understand correctly, the problem with this discovery is that we no longer have Aurignacian human remains in the Vogelherd site, just their artefacts.

Human fossils found there are dating from the Neolithic. But apparently no Neolithic artefacts have been found at that site.

In summary we have the folllowing table for the Vogelherd site :

                        ____________________________
                        !    Human remains    !   Artefacts    !
!------------------!--------------------------!-----------------!
! Aurignacian   !         None               !     Several     !
!------------------!--------------------------!-----------------!
! Neolithic        !       Several              !      None       !
!------------------!--------------------------!-----------------!

And given the techniques known and used during the early explorations of the site, there seems to be little chances that we will understand the reasons of that situation.

Thanks for your explanations.

Paul
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Paul Trehin
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« Reply #19 on: July 19, 2004, 12:29:13 PM »

Paul:

I think your little diagram sums up the situation.  Though I didn't know that no Neolithic artifacts have been found with Neolithic burials or fossils.
Anne G
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hunasiensis
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« Reply #20 on: July 19, 2004, 12:56:44 PM »

  Normally, an archaeologist will look for clues to this sort of intrusion, but the excavator, Hahn, who dug up the Vogelherd human fossils did not note any sign of an intrusive burial.

Dear Dar and all,

it was not Hahn but Riek who excavated Vogelherd in the early 1930ies.  Conard mentions Riek having removed about 300 cubic meters of sediments within 3 months, quite usual for the then state of the art. So Riek probably did not only overlook the neolithic burial but finer substrata as well.
Hahn's  excavation at Geissenkloesterle is exemplary.

Having the opportunity to take part in a nearby cave excavation I noticed that using Hahn's methods only about  4 cubic meter or less in a 2 months' term are removed in an area of about 6 sqm.

This being my first mail in this forum -after several months of lurking- I would like to introduce myself to all who don't know me yet: I'm an amateur in archaeology mostly interested in palaeo- through neolithics. I live in Erlangen/Bavaria/Germany situated near the Franconian jura with many nice caves especially in the Altmuehl valley.

Arne




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Daryl Habel
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« Reply #21 on: July 19, 2004, 07:35:16 PM »

Dear Arne,

Thanks for the correction - my memory wasn't working right when I mis-remembered Hahn with Gustav Riek's excavation of the Vogelherd cranium.  Welcome to the discussion.

Just to add a few constructive additions, the most recent such "rejuvenation(s)" of this type, alluded to by Jacques, include:

(1) the modern-looking human frontal bone from Velika Pecina, Croatia, found in association with a "proto-Aurignacian" tool in level J, and lying stratigraphically below the level I  14C-dated to 33,850 +/- 520 BP on nonhuman material, yielded a Holocene age of 5,045 +/- 40 BP when the frontal bone was directly dated:

Smith, F., Trinkaus, E. Pettitt, P.B., Karavanic, I. & Paunovic, M. (1999). Direct radiocarbon dates for Vindija G1 and Velika Pecina hominid remains. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 96 (22): 12281-12286.  Available free from the PNAS website at: CLICK HERE

(2) the human frontal bone from Hahnofersand, which was seen by some as an intermediate (archaic H.s.) fossil at the MP/UP transition, was published by Brauer in 1980 with a dating by 14C AAR-method of 36, 300 +/- 600 bp, later revised downward (Brauer 1981) to 33,200 +/- 3000 BP.  When the Hahnofersand frontal was directly dated by 14C AMS, the sample yielded a date of 6339 +/- 69 cal. BC (Terberger et al. 2001).

(3) the Kelsterbach cranium had been dated to 31 ka (Stringer et al. 1984:68) by the same lab using the same method (AAR) to date the Hahnofersand frontal.  I'm not sure whether Kelsterbach has been recently directly-dated, but being a part of the same series as Hahnofersand, this cranium has also "fallen from grace" (certainly suspect, at least) as a possible early Aurignacian-age AMH.

Both from Germany,  Hahnofersand and Kelsterbach were recovered from ancient river gravels, so neither was found in a recognizable stratigraphic sequence with associated artifacts or faunal material.

Finally, I'll reassure Anne that Neolithic artifacts are often found in Neolithic burials elsewhere - the point here is that (recognizable) Neolithic artifact material was not found with the Vogelherd fossils.

Dar    
 
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Daryl Habel
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Jacques Cinq-Mars
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« Reply #22 on: July 29, 2004, 09:08:37 PM »

All,

Here are a few points I feel should be made in response to Anthrostudies & al. ongoing discussion. Since It could have been much longer, confusing and boring, I won’t apologize for the length.


Anthrostudies:
Quote
This is interesting because the Soanian in Asia, is a very primitive style of tool industry which persists into the Neolithic - I wonder what species of hominid made the Soanian.

I know its not relevent, since the tools haven't been redated. But, if an Acheulian-like (Mode 2/3) industry can survive for so long elsewhere, an Upper Paleolithic industry could persist into the Neolithic in Europe.

If theres a link between certain archaic and modern races, then, ghost lineages into more recent times are suggested by the late appearence of certain modern types.

Assuming that I understand you correctly, allow me to disagree. To quote Geraads & al. 2004:759 ( ref. below),

“The use of a so-called simple technology by hominids is certainly neither a univocal indicator of high antiquity nor a deciding factor of cultural affinity.” … and, I would add that this applies to instances of human phylogenetic appurtenance and this, in quite a few research circumstances.

Geraads, Denis, Jean-Paul Raynal, and Vera Eisenmann. 2004. The earliest human occupation of North Africa: a reply to Sahnouni et al. (2002). Journal of Human Evolution 46: 751–761.
CLICK HERE for access to the actual article.

The history of prehistoric or palaeoanthropological research, from the late 19th century to almost the end of the first half of the last one, is filled with a variety of so-called ‘typological’ hypotheses -- such as the one(s) you seem to suggest (adhere to ?) -- that were, in addition, coupled with the rather simplistic ethnographic (‘comparative method’) analogies of the days. As the years went by, many if not most of these were found to be, interpretively/paradigmatically, rather wanting or just plain cul-de-sacs. Unfortunately, history, in this case, does seem to repeat itself or, at the very least, to drag on forever, and there are still quite a few researchers around who appear not to be too concerned about the finer lessons of history.

This said, I would suggest that it is incorrect or, at the very least uncautious and potentially misleading and confusing to apply basic cultural taxonomic labels to entities such as the Soanian which, to my knowledge, remains to be well understood and clearly characterized/defined with regards to it overall chronological, techno-typological, etc. context(s) and the actual identity of its bearers/makers.

For more on the Soanian, see HERE, as well as the abstract of a paper presented by Parth Chauhan at the recent Montreal Palaeoanthropology meeting. See HERE.


Anne Gilbert:
Quote
You say you wonder what species of hominid made the Soanian?  I don't know.  I don't know anything about the Soanian.  OTOH, it seems like what evidence there is suggests that you can't really link a tool type to a type or species of hominid any more.  Both AMH and Neandertals utilized "Mousterian" tools in what is now Israel. and Neandertals used the more "advanced" Chatelperronian later on. The suggestion that comes out of this Vogelherd study is that, absent any fossils, we don't know *who* used the earliest Aurignacian.  Maybe *both* Neandertals *and* AMH.  Until we have some fossils, there will be no way of knowing.

Just a picky point, here. You are quite right in noting that hominid-lithics equations have now been shown to frequently incorrect. However, such invalidations are rarely, if at all, arrived at on the basis of ‘tool types’, but on contextually (relatively) well-defined industries/cultural traditions. For example, I can assure you that I have found very respectable ‘Acheulean’ and dignified ‘Mousterian’ bifaces in eastern Beringia. If I had not known better, perhaps I would have made it into the media.  In other words, ‘tool-types’ alone can be very misleading.

Anthrostudies (in response to A.G. – above):
Quote
Yes, you're right, its a mystery. With the Soanian being a transitional Acheulian to Mousterian industry though, its a impessive survival of a tool type until the Neolithic?

See my earlier comments.


Paul Tréhin:
Quote
Older lithic industries sem to survive long after new ones have appeared. It is actually the case for most tools : even though electric powered planes used in wood work have been invented more that 40 years ago, hand held planes are still in use...

A few years ago I saw a great TV reportage on a small contemporary tribe in Papouasia which was still using acheulean tools. The grand father was teaching his grand children where to find appropriate flint nodules, how to chose the right ones and how to do flint knapping. It was extremely interesting, unfortunately, I haven't been able to retrieve the producer of the reportage.

This shows that stone industries can survive for very long periods.

From the above, it should be clear that these people from Papua were definitely not [making] and using Acheulean tools, but their own, in time and space and that the superficial similarities between the latter and the former – - which happen to be separated by great  chronological and geographical distances –- can definitely not be used to overstate the survival length of ‘industries’ and lithic techno-complexes.


Paul Tréhin:
Quote
I just thought of another possibility for the Vogelherd ivory horse being dated from the Aurignatian. Could it be that the ivory itself was from that period but that the sculpture was made much later on ?

From a style point of view this would be rather unlikely... Neolithic art was much less realistic than the ivory horse is.

Were there neolithic style artefacts besides the ivory horse and the recently found Acheulean tools ?

Well, what a fantastic new subject of research...

Fossil or sub-fossil ivory is used now and is likely to have been used in the distant past, for a variety of purposes. As a matter of fact, an Alaskan site has yielded, a few years ago, an ivory point whose date is a bit earlier than all the other dates obtained from the stratigraphic unit in which it was found. In fact, sufficiently older to suggest that the actual ivory blank is likely to have come from fossil mammoth ivory. But in this instance and all the other ones I know of, the raw material in question is (was) obtained from sedimentary deposits of various kinds which are (or must have been) characterized by continuous or near/discontinuous permafrost conditions. If it could be demonstrated that such unique preservation conditions were present in the Swabian Jura shortly prior to and at the time of the Vogelherd Aurignacian occupation, one would be in a position to imagine an ‘earlier than’ date for the Vogelherd ivory figurines, but certainly not younger and definitely not Neolithic. It follows that the most parsimonious explanation is that the figurines in question were produced by Aurignacian carvers using relatively fresh or possibly, if permafrost conditions were extant, on fossil ivory.

Daryl Habel:
Quote
And no "recently found Acheulean tools" at Vogelherd either.  You seem to be confusing anthrostudies' change of subject (to Acheulean-Soan, which is a Pakistani-Indian Himalayan industry) with Vogelherd.

You are right. This was (is) all very confusing.

Jacques
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Jacques Cinq-Mars
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« Reply #23 on: July 30, 2004, 06:39:08 AM »

All,

Last night, I forgot to mention that since this discussion  has definitely drifted away from its initial purpose and, if it were to continue under its present form, it should be moved, under a new Topic/title to the Prehistory Board.

Jacques Cinq-Mars
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