Long-Lost Neanderthal Tooth Reveals a Surprising Unknown Link to Modern Humans
CARLY CASSELLA 18 FEBRUARY 2021
In 1928, the renowned British archaeologist, Dorothy Garrod, excavated the Shukbah Cave in the hills of Palestine, just north of Jerusalem.
This was some of her earliest work in a long and successful career, revealing a rich collection of ancient stone tools, animal bones, and a single fossilised tooth - what looked like a large human molar.
For fifty years the discovery was lost in the private collection of a collaborator, unrecognised and neglected. Then, at the turn of the century, the long-lost tooth landed in the laps of researchers at the British Museum of Natural History.
Looking closely at the large molar, researchers realised it was probably from a young Neanderthal, possibly between the ages of 7 and 12.
To date, the Shukbah tooth is the southernmost example of the Neanderthal range in Arabia.
"Up to now we have no direct evidence of a Neanderthal presence in Africa," says Chris Stringer, who studies human evolution at the Natural History Museum.
More:
https://www.sciencealert.com/a-long-lost-neanderthal-tooth-has-been-linked-to-surprisingly-human-like-tools