Charcoal, ashes and coprolites: the latest findings to shed light on the Neanderthals at Prado Vargas

Over two thousand remains of animals and stone tools from the Neanderthal period were recovered in the ninth excavation campaign at this site in the Ojo Guareña karst complex, in the north of the province of Burgos, where work is codirected by Rodrigo Alonso Alcalde, Alfonso Benito Calvo and Marta Navazo Ruiz.

Excavation at Prado Vargas site/CENIEH
Excavation at Prado Vargas site/CENIEH

The geologist Alfonso Benito Calvo, a researcher at the Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana (CENIEH), is one of the codirectors of the ninth excavation campaign at the Neanderthal site of Prado Vargas, a cave in the Ojo Guareña karst complex, in the north of the province of Burgos, where more than two thousand remains of fauna and stone tools were recovered in the month of August.

Specifically, the thirty square meters excavated this year from Level 4 (46,000 years old) yielded teeth and bone fragments from cave bear (Ursus speleaeus), wild boar (Sus scrofa), horse (Equus ferus) and red deer (Cervus elaphus) were found, as well as numerous flint and quartzite tools, among which the highlights are racloirs and rough-edged flakes. 

The main novelty for this campaign is the recovery of a hearth, which was raised en bloc for more detailed processing and study in the laboratory. Analysis of the ashes, charcoal and scorched sediments and materials will reveal which species of trees were in the landscape, the temperature the fire reached, its structure, and when the hearth was used. 

The second major finding was of eight coprolites (fossilized feces) from cave bear, which will offer information about these animals’ diet and genetic makeup. Analyzing these will also allow us to see which fruit and plants were among the biotic resources of the zone 46,000 years ago, and which might therefore have been gathered by the Neanderthals who occupied Cueva de Prado Vargas.

Neanderthal occupation

This year’s excavation has evinced the existence of different sublevels within Level 4, showing that the cave was occupied by various Neanderthal generations, who used the cavity as their fireplace for hundreds or thousands of years.

“We have collected samples of charcoal and bones from the different sublevels for dating and so that we can see exactly how much time elapsed between the different occupations,”

comment the three codirectors of Prado Vargas: Alfonso Benito Calvo, Marta Navazo Ruiz (University of Burgos), and Rodrigo Alonso Alcalde (Museo de la Evolución Humana and University of Burgos). 

Including this ninth campaign, more than 15,000 remains have been recovered which, as the codirectors also explain, make Prado Vargas a key place in our scientific understanding of how the last Neanderthals to occupy this part of the Iberian Peninsula lived. The most important of these pieces is a deciduous molar from an eight-year-old Neanderthal girl dubbed Vera: to date this is the most ancient human remains discovered in the Ojo Guareña karst complex.

Scientific outreach

Since this project got under way in 2016, one of its hallmarks has been communicating the progress and results of the excavations to those living nearby. With this in mind, participatory activities were carried out so that local people and visitors to the area could discover what the different excavation campaigns had found. 

During this year’s campaign, the activities included an open day and a talk given by the codirectors Navazo Ruiz and Benito Calvo in the Casa de Cultura in Villarcayo, organized by the Asociación Cultural Amigos de Villarcayo, with the collaboration of the town’s council.

However, the undoubted star among the activities was the workshop where archaeological sediments from the site were washed. Over three days, the children and adults who came washed a half-ton of sediments from its Level 4, recovering more than fifty pieces such as small fragments of burned bones, various mole and rodent teeth, and numerous pieces from flint knapping. This was organized in collaboration with Ráspano Ecoturismo and the Ojo Guareña Natural Monument Interpretation Center.

Since excavations at Cueva de Prado Vargas started, the research has enjoyed financial and material support from the Consejería de Cultura, Turismo y Deportes of the Junta de Castilla y León, the Diputación Provincial de Burgos, the Ayuntamiento de la Merindad de Sotoscueva, the Fundación Palarq, the localities of Cornejo and Quisicedo, the Ojo Guareña Natural Monument Interpretation Center, the local associations La Escuela de Cornejo and Naboqui de Quisicedo, and all those living locally, who have shown great interest in learning about and communicating the archaeological heritage of their territory.

Press release from Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana – CENIEH

Dove i classici si incontrano. ClassiCult è una Testata Giornalistica registrata presso il Tribunale di Bari numero R.G. 5753/2018 – R.S. 17. Direttore Responsabile Domenico Saracino, Vice Direttrice Alessandra Randazzo. Gli articoli a nome di ClassiCult possono essere 1) articoli a più mani (in tal caso, i diversi autori sono indicati subito dopo il titolo); 2) comunicati stampa (in tal caso se ne indica provenienza e autore a fine articolo).

Write A Comment

Pin It