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75,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Woman's Facial Reconstruction Sheds New Light on Our Archaic Human Ancestors
The Debrief ^ | May 3, 2024 | CHRISSY NEWTON

Posted on 05/03/2024 11:17:40 AM PDT by Red Badger

In 2018, a female Neanderthal was discovered in the Shanidar Cave in Iraqi Kurdistan. Now, archaeologists from The University of Cambridge have unveiled the reconstructed face of the 75,000-year-old woman, based on the assembly of hundreds of individual bone fragments recovered during excavations.

“Neanderthals have had a bad press ever since the first ones were found over 150 years ago,” said Professor Graeme Barker from Cambridge’s McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, who led the excavation at the cave where the woman’s remains were discovered. Neanderthals are believed to have become extinct around 40,000 years ago, and discoveries of their remains are relatively rare.

Named Shanidar Z after the location where her flattened skull was found, the woman’s remains were discovered in an area where the species had repeatedly returned to bury their dead. Believed to have been in her mid-40s based on data obtained from sequencing of tooth enamel proteins that also helped determine her sex, the Neanderthal woman was found in a sleeping position under a huge vertical stone marker.

The Shanidar Z skull (Image Credit: University of Cambridge).

Standing at just five feet tall and possessing some of the smallest adult arm bones found in the Neanderthal fossil record, her physical characteristics also suggest she was female.

“The skulls of Neanderthals and humans look very different,” says Dr. Emma Pomeroy, a palaeo-anthropologist from Cambridge’s Department of Archaeology. Neanderthal skulls have huge brow ridges and lack chins, with a projecting midface that results in more prominent noses. However, the reconstructed face of the 75,000-year-old Neanderthal woman suggests those differences were not so apparent in life.

“It’s perhaps easier to see how interbreeding occurred between our species,” Pomeroy said of the woman’s likeness to modern humans, “adding that almost everyone alive today still has Neanderthal DNA.”

Dr Emma Pomeroy (left) pictured with Dr Lucía López-Polín alongside the newly reconstructed face of a 75,000 year old Neanderthal woman (Image credit: Emma Pomeroy).

Featured in a new Netflix documentary, “The ‘Secrets of the Neanderthals”, produced by BBC Studios Science, the program follows a team of archeologists from the universities of Cambridge and Liverpool John Moores as they return to Shanidar Cave to continue their excavations and study remnants of our archaic ancestors.

Researchers believe that Shanidar Z could be the upper portion of an individual whose remains were initially found during excavations in 1960. The Neanderthal woman’s death may have resulted from her head being crushed by falling rocks, and soon afterward, the brain decomposed, allowing her skull to fill with soil and become flattened to around two centimeters in thickness, the state in which archeologists discovered the remains in 2018.

The skull of Shanidar Z, flattened by thousands of years of sediment and rock fall, in situ in Shanidar Cave, Iraqi Kurdistan (Credit: Graeme Barker).

The Cambridge team decided the best plan would be to unearth the skeleton, after which they used a glue-like strengthening agent that would help to solidify the bones around the sediment. Shanidar Z was carefully extracted in dozens of small foil-wrapped blocks from deep within the cave, buried under seven and a half meters of soil and rock.

Once the remains were back at Cambridge, lab researchers produced micro-CT scans of each block before gradually diluting the glue and using the scans to guide the extraction of bone fragments.

“Each skull fragment is gently cleaned while glue and consolidant are re-added to stabilise the bone, which can be very soft, similar in consistency to a biscuit dunked in tea,” Pomeroy said in a statement. “It’s like a high stakes 3D jigsaw puzzle. A single block can take over a fortnight to process.”

Crucial work performed by lead conservator Dr. Lucía López-Polín saw the painstaking reassembly of more than 200 skull fragments by hand, which gradually returned portions of the skull to its original shape and form.

Kennis Brothers Reconstruction and Shanidar Z skull (Image Credit: University of Cambridge).

The reassembled skull was then surfaced scanned, and a reproduction produced using 3D printing technologies, which was used as the basis for the final reconstruction produced by paleoartists.

“It’s extremely exciting and a massive privilege actually to be able to work with the remains of any individual but especially one as special as her,” Pomeroy told BBC News.

Although remains of at least ten different Neanderthals have been discovered in the cave, Shanidar Z is the fifth found among a group of bodies buried together in close proximity and likely at around the same time.

“It’s always difficult piecing together a highly fragmented skull,” says Michael Masters Ph.D., a professor of biological anthropology at Montana Technological University in Butte, Montana.

“The debate surrounding Sahelanthropus tchadensis as a member of the hominin clade is a good example of what’s at stake in this tenuous pursuit,” said Masters, who was not directly involved in the recent reconstruction effort, in an email to The Debrief.

“However, with new technologies and methodologies, such as those used by the Cambridge lab to reconstruct the 200 highly fragmented pieces crushed by rockfall and millennia of sedimentation, it is possible to get an accurate depiction of who this Neanderthal woman from 75,000 years ago was and what she looked like, which further adds to our understanding of this fascinating human subspecies.”

Chrissy Newton is a PR professional and founder of VOCAB Communications. She hosts the Rebelliously Curious podcast, which can be found on The Debrief’s YouTube Channel. Follow her on X: @ChrissyNewton and at chrissynewton.com.


TOPICS: History; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: 300manyearsoflabor; ancientautopsies; fauxiantroll; fauxiantrolls; ganymedehypothesis; godsgravesglyphs; helixmakemineadouble; neandertal; neandertals; neanderthal; neanderthals; noahsmalarkey; tedholden; youngearthdelusion; youngearthdelusions
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To: Red Badger
I'm watching a Netflix special on Neanderthals right now. Presently they're covering the cave where this woman was found.

So far, so good.

81 posted on 05/03/2024 3:19:36 PM PDT by blam
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To: Red Badger

Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

shes supposed to look like Rachel Welch


82 posted on 05/03/2024 5:05:27 PM PDT by Tennessee Nana
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To: BobL

I know...I was shocked Laz hadn’t yet been pinged, before my #30 post.. 😂


83 posted on 05/03/2024 6:42:21 PM PDT by Jane Long (The role of the GOP: to write sharply-worded certailetters as America becomes a communist hell-hole.)
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To: ckilmer

Europeans have about 3% Neanderthal DNA. Asians have some Denisovan DNA. Africans have neither. Africans also have up to 20% DNA from archaic hominids that are not found in Europeans.


84 posted on 05/03/2024 7:45:47 PM PDT by Mr. Blond
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To: Red Badger; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; ...
Thanks Red Badger. They are among our many ancestors.
The Neandertal Enigma
by James Shreeve

in local libraries
Frayer's own reading of the record reveals a number of overlooked traits that clearly and specifically link the Neandertals to the Cro-Magnons. One such trait is the shape of the opening of the nerve canal in the lower jaw, a spot where dentists often give a pain-blocking injection. In many Neandertal, the upper portion of the opening is covered by a broad bony ridge, a curious feature also carried by a significant number of Cro-Magnons. But none of the alleged 'ancestors of us all' fossils from Africa have it, and it is extremely rare in modern people outside Europe." [pp 126-127]

85 posted on 05/04/2024 6:10:50 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: Dilbert San Diego
Most people carry Neandertal genes, in about a slightly greater amount as they carry genes passed down from about 46 of their great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents.

86 posted on 05/04/2024 6:16:37 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: Red Badger

Eyes are too small when compared to the eye sockets. I’m guessing larger eyes=ability to gather more light=creatures of the night.

Night hunting and gathering allowed them to live side by side with homo sapiens and have some interbreeding without excessive competition.

Until it didn’t...


87 posted on 05/04/2024 7:17:23 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: Jonty30
The lack of intermediary forms suggests no overlaps with humans.

A few percent Neanderthal DNA in modern humans suggests intimate overlap with humans.

88 posted on 05/04/2024 7:19:28 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: Jonty30
But interbreeding between two species, even supposedly close ones, results in a creature that is sterile.

USUALLY, but not always, there are a few, very few, fertile mules.

89 posted on 05/04/2024 7:22:20 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: null and void

All it takes is a few and time with repetition.


90 posted on 05/04/2024 7:24:26 AM PDT by Reily (!!)
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To: ganeemead

We agree on eye size, but not much else.


91 posted on 05/04/2024 7:25:22 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: null and void

I don’t necessarily consider shared DNA to be proof of interbreeding. We share about 75% of our DNA with mushrooms. Are you suggesting that we got it on with a fungi at one time?


92 posted on 05/04/2024 7:26:20 AM PDT by Jonty30 (He hunted a mammoth for me, just because I said I was hungry. He is such a good friend. )
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To: woodbutcher1963; Lazamataz
Would Laz hit it?

Yes.

DUH.

93 posted on 05/04/2024 7:31:02 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: redshawk

Klinger would never get a Section 8 in today’s Army.

A promotion maybe...


94 posted on 05/04/2024 7:35:13 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: null and void

Neanderthal DNA is roughly halfway between ours and that of a chimpanzee and a bit closer to that of the chimp. You have to start by asking yourself what youd expect such a creature to look like; a slightly different human is simply the wrong answer.


95 posted on 05/04/2024 8:16:02 AM PDT by ganeemead (everything )
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To: Flaming Conservative
Either carbon dating is not accurate, or there is the “gap theory”, with Satan trying to create humanity, and failing spectacularly.

Within limits radiocarbon dating is fairly accurate.

Gap theory, Satan trying to create humanity, and failing spectacularly? Interesting.

Perhaps not so spectacularly.

On the average, modern humans have 2-3% Neanderthal DNA.

On the average.

Some more, some much more. Does much more correlate with being a sociopath or politician?

Does everyone have some Neanderthal DNA?

If so, are we all damned under a 'single Neanderthal gene rule', the equivalent of the old 'one drop rule'?

Or are there 'pureblood' homo sapiens?

Were the intermarried royal bloodlines an attempt to preserve a pure blood line or preserve a high Neaderthal lineage?

Several testable hypotheses there...

96 posted on 05/04/2024 8:31:55 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: Jonty30; Fungi

Name him ping him...


97 posted on 05/04/2024 8:34:38 AM PDT by null and void (Everyone on all sides a conflict will be happy to lie to you, except our side, of course!)
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To: Jonty30

Cro Magnon had features of both.


98 posted on 05/04/2024 11:51:25 AM PDT by ThanhPhero
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To: Red Badger

Police reconstructions often match pretty closely the faces of photographs of the people when alive. And no the photos were not available to make the reconstruction. The photos were located once ID had been made from the reconstruction.


99 posted on 05/04/2024 11:53:59 AM PDT by ThanhPhero
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To: Jonty30

Well as it says, we all have a tad of Neanderthal DNA thus there was not sterile interbreeding and I do think that two “different” species that interbreed successfully are by that feature a single species.


100 posted on 05/04/2024 11:57:35 AM PDT by ThanhPhero
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