logo
What a 5,000-year-old whale tooth tells us about ancient craftspeople

What a 5,000-year-old whale tooth tells us about ancient craftspeople

Independent20-06-2025
A rare sperm whale tooth, discovered at the Copper Age Valencina archaeological site in southwest Spain, offers new insights into ancient Iberian artistry.
This fossil, dated to between 5,300 and 4,150 years ago, is the first marine mammal tooth of its kind found from this period in Iberia.
Copper Age craftspeople likely collected the tooth from an ancient shoreline and fashioned it into personal ornaments or symbolic artifacts before its deliberate burial.
Analysis revealed the tooth belonged to an adult sperm whale, showing signs of natural marine erosion and distinct human modifications like drilled holes and cut marks.
The discovery significantly enhances understanding of ivory use in prehistoric times.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Buckler's Hard: Slipway where HMS Agamemnon built revealed
Buckler's Hard: Slipway where HMS Agamemnon built revealed

BBC News

time12 hours ago

  • BBC News

Buckler's Hard: Slipway where HMS Agamemnon built revealed

A slipway from the 18th Century where ships for Lord Nelson's fleet were built and launched has been excavated by archaeologists. The team from the University of Southampton said it was the first time one from this period has been totally uncovered in the Hard, the small hamlet in the New Forest where the slipway is located, was once home to one of the busiest private shipyards of the researchers said they hope the findings would help improve their understanding of shipbuilding techniques and infrastructure during the period. The dig was supported by the newly formed Buckler's Hard Shipyard Trust, a conservation charity.A total of 55 wooden warships were built at Buckler's Hard for the Royal Navy in the 1700s, some of which were comparable in size to HMS Victory. "No other private yard built as many ships for the navy during this period," said Professor Jon Adams, director of the university's Centre for Maritime Archaeology. Unlike the slipway at Buckler's Hard, most slipways from the 18th Century are now buried under Adams said that made this one uniquely suited for learning about traditional shipbuilding."The only opportunity is a place like this where you can actually see the whole of the whole of the infrastructure and the logistical structures needed to build ships of that size," he said. One of the most famous ships built at the site was HMS Agamemnon, which took part in the Battle of Trafalgar and was known as Lord Nelson's "favourite".There are now plans to place a replica of the vessel on the end of the slipway as it would have looked under construction.A 3D model of the slipway has also been created to aid research, and the site will be covered with a new layer of soil and topped with timbers in the style of the 1700s."The visitor would then come into the village and actually see what the yard might have looked like," said Prof Adams. You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Scientists baffled by mysterious new statue emerging on Easter Island: 'This is a first'
Scientists baffled by mysterious new statue emerging on Easter Island: 'This is a first'

Daily Mail​

time19 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Scientists baffled by mysterious new statue emerging on Easter Island: 'This is a first'

A new statue has emerged from the dirt of a recently dried-up lakebed on Easter Island, baffling scientists who said it should not be there. Easter Island is considered a mystery due to its 1,000 large stone heads, known as moai, which are 700 to 1,000 years old. Terry Hunt, professor of archaeology at the University of Arizona, told Good Morning America: 'We think we know all the moai, but then a new one turns up, a new discovery, and in this case, it's in the lake, at the statue quarry. 'There have been no moai found in the dry lakebed before, so this is a first.' The newly discovered moai is among the smallest found, suggesting that many more could be hidden within the reeds. Each moai honors a person, usually a leader, and many are topped with eye stones at their resting place. The largest stands over 30 feet tall and weighs up to 86 tons. Salvador Atan Hito, vice president of Ma'u Henua, the Indigenous group managing the island's national park, said: 'For the Rapa Nui people, this is a very, very important discovery. 'Because it's here in the lake and nobody knew it existed, even our ancestors, our grandparents didn't know about this one.' Hunt and Hito said the current dry conditions may help archaeologists discover more moai in the lakebed. 'Under the dry conditions that we have now, we may find more,' Hunt told GMA. 'They've been hidden by the tall reeds that grow in the lake bed, and prospecting with something that can detect what's under the ground surface may tell us that there are more moai in the lakebed sediments. 'When there's one moai in the lake, there's probably more.' Due to its remote location, Easter Island is traditionally assumed to have remained socially and culturally isolated from the wider Pacific world. This idea is reinforced by the fact that Easter Island's famous Moai statues, estimated to have been built between AD 1250 and 1500, are unique to the location. For the past decade, Hunt and his colleagues and students have created an inventory of 981 moai on the island, complete with precise GPS locations and measurements. Many moai remain in a quarry near Rano Raraku, the now-dry crater lake where the newest statue was found, in various stages of completion. The largest, called Te Tokanga or 'The Giant' in the Rapa Nui language, was never finished and lies on its back, measuring 63 feet long and weighing an estimated 90 to 100 tons. The team made a similar discovery in 2023, finding another new moa that measured five feet by six inches long and was found face up in the ground. Hunt said the statue's eye sockets had been carved, which is historically the final step in a moai's construction before display. The base is also flat, rather than sloped, to help with moving the statue. Researchers believed that the ancient Rapa Nui people likely moved the moai statues by 'walking' them upright using ropes to rock and pivot the statues forward in a controlled, rocking motion. This method, supported by experiments and oral traditions, allowed them to move these massive statues across the island without dragging them on sleds or rollers. Hunt frequently uses cell phones and drones for 3D imaging of the moai. He is also exploring the use of ground-penetrating radar to detect hidden moai or structures underground, particularly in the Rano Raraku lakebed. Historically, the original inhabitants, known as the Rapa Nui, were believed to have been completely shut off from the wider world. However, a study released in July by researchers in Sweden challenged the long-held narrative. They said the 63.2-square-mile island in the southern Pacific was not quite as isolated over the past 800 years as previously thought. The island was populated with multiple waves of new inhabitants who bravely traversed the Pacific Ocean from west to east. 'Easter Island was settled from central East Polynesia around AD 1200-1250,' study author Professor Paul Wallin at Uppsala University told the Daily Mail. 'The Polynesians were skilled sailors, so double canoes were used.' For their study, the team at Uppsala University compared archaeological data and radiocarbon dates from settlements, ritual spaces and monuments across Polynesia, the collection of more than 1,000 islands in the Pacific Ocean. The experts point out that ahu stone platforms were historically constructed at Polynesian islands further to the west. These rectangular clearings were communal ritual spaces that, in some places, remain sacred to this day. 'The temple grounds ahu [also known as marae] exist on all East Polynesian islands,' Professor Wallin added. The team agreed that an early population of people spread from the west of the Pacific to the east before encountering Easter Island and populating it around AD 1200. They argued that Easter Island was populated several times by new seafarers, and not just once by a single group that remained isolated for centuries, as previously assumed. 'The migration process from West Polynesian core areas such as Tonga and Samoa to East Polynesia is not disputed here,' they say in their paper. 'Still, the static west-to-east colonization and dispersal suggested for East Polynesia and the idea that Rapa Nui was only colonized once in the past and developed in isolation are challenged.' Based on their evidence, they also think ahu originated on Easter Island before the trend spread east to west across other western Polynesian islands during the period of AD 1300-1600. It was only after this that the Polynesian islands, including but not limited to Easter Island, might have become isolated from each other.

Northumberland dig students find 9th Century gold object
Northumberland dig students find 9th Century gold object

BBC News

timea day ago

  • BBC News

Northumberland dig students find 9th Century gold object

An international student discovered a piece of 9th century gold just 90 minutes into her first archaeological early medieval object was found by Newcastle University student Yara Souza at a recent excavation in Redesdale, was buried close to the route of Dere Street, a major Roman road which ran between York and Edinburgh and which eventually became part of the modern-day Souza, from Florida in the US, said: "It was amazing to discover something that hadn't been seen for more than a thousand years, I was really geeking out over it." The excavation took place in July following the chance discovery of a similar object by metal detectorist Alan Gray at the same location in Souza was working alongside her fellow Archaeology students and archaeologists from North East Museums to further investigate the site. The find is approximately four centimetres (1.5 inches) long and has a decorative finial at one was high status and only used by the elite and, as Dere Street connected two major religious centres at Jedburgh and Hexham, experts involved in the excavation think both objects could have had a religious or ceremonial James Gerrard said: "This is an exciting find of exceptional quality."We know that Dere Street continued to be a major thoroughfare long after the Romans and it's clear from this discovery that high status people were using it. "It is possible that this pair of objects may have been deliberately buried."The find will be further analysed and could eventually be displayed in the Great North Museum: Agate, the Portable Antiquities Scheme's finds liaison officer for North East England, said the project is "a great example of how metal detectorists and archaeologists can come together to add to our understanding of the past in Northumberland". Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store