ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI—The International Business Times reports that Erik Trinkaus of Washington University in St. Louis and Sébastien Villotte of the French National Center for Scientific Research examined the remains of a Neanderthal known as Shanidar 1, which were discovered in 1957 in Shanidar Cave in Iraqi Kurdistan. They found that the man had lived into his 40s, while likely suffering from profound hearing loss caused by bone growths in his ear canals. Such hearing loss is thought to have made him vulnerable to carnivores in the environment. Shanidar 1 also suffered from blows to the right side of his face at an early age, the amputation of his right arm at the elbow, injuries to his right leg, and what the scientists called a “systematic degenerative condition.” Trinkaus and Villotte conclude that Shanidar 1 would have relied upon other hunter-gatherers in his network for survival. For more, go to “A Traditional Neanderthal Home.”
Neanderthal Remains Re-examined
News October 24, 2017
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2021
Neanderthal Hearing
Top 10 Discoveries of the Decade January/February 2021
Neanderthal Genome
Vindija Cave, Croatia, 2010
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2020
Painful Past
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2020
Twisted Neanderthal Tech
-
Features September/October 2017
Painted Worlds
Searching for the meaning of self-expression in the land of the Moche
(Courtesy Lisa Trever) -
Letter from California September/October 2017
The Ancient Ecology of Fire
Lessons emerge from the ways in which North American hunter-gatherers managed the landscape around them
(Justin Sullivan / Gettyimages) -
Artifacts September/October 2017
Gilded Copper Color Disc
(Courtesy Illinois State Military Museum) -
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2017
White Horse of the Sun
(Skyscan Photolibrary / Alamy)