Neanderthals knew how to make stone tools just like humans, according to scientists who discovered a first of its kind 60,000-year-old multi-purpose bone tool.
The extremely well preserved tool found at an archaeological site in France suggests the Neanderthals may not have been as technologically inferior to our species as previously thought.
"This is the first time a multi-purpose bone tool from this period has been discovered," said Luc Doyon from the University of Montreal's Department of Anthropology.
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Neanderthals lived in Europe and western Asia in the Middle Paleolithic between around 250,000 to 28,000 years ago.
The production of bone tools by Neanderthals is open to debate. For much of the twentieth century, prehistoric experts were reluctant to recognise the ability of this species to incorporate materials like bone into their technological know-how and likewise their ability to master the techniques needed to work bone.
However, over the past two decades, many clues indicate the use of hard materials from animals by Neanderthals.
"Our discovery is an additional indicator of bone work by Neanderthals and helps put into question the linear view of the evolution of human behaviour," Doyon said.
The tool in question was uncovered in June 2014 during the annual digs at the Grotte du Bison at Arcy-sur-Cure in Burgundy, France.
Extremely well preserved, the tool comes from the left femur of an adult reindeer and its age is estimated between 55,000 and 60,000 years ago.
Marks observed on it allow us to trace its history. Obtaining bones for the manufacture of tools was not the primary motivation for Neanderthals hunting - above all, they hunted to obtain the rich energy provided by meat and marrow.
Evidence of meat butchering and bone fracturing to extract marrow are evident on the tool.
Percussion marks suggest the use of the bone fragment for carved sharpening the cutting edges of stone tools. Finally, chipping and a significant polish show the use of the bone as a scraper.
"The presence of this tool at a context where stone tools are abundant suggests an opportunistic choice of the bone fragment and its intentional modification into a tool by Neanderthals," Doyon said.
"It was long thought that before Homo sapiens, other species did not have the cognitive ability to produce this type of artifact. This discovery reduces the presumed gap between the two species and prevents us from saying that one was technically superior to the other," Doyon added.