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Selection and Use of Manganese Dioxide by Neanderthals.


ABSTRACT: Several Mousterian sites in France have yielded large numbers of small black blocs. The usual interpretation is that these 'manganese oxides' were collected for their colouring properties and used in body decoration, potentially for symbolic expression. Neanderthals habitually used fire and if they needed black material for decoration, soot and charcoal were readily available, whereas obtaining manganese oxides would have incurred considerably higher costs. Compositional analyses lead us to infer that late Neanderthals at Pech-de-l'Azé I were deliberately selecting manganese dioxide. Combustion experiments and thermo-gravimetric measurements demonstrate that manganese dioxide reduces wood's auto-ignition temperature and substantially increases the rate of char combustion, leading us to conclude that the most beneficial use for manganese dioxide was in fire-making. With archaeological evidence for fire places and the conversion of the manganese dioxide to powder, we argue that Neanderthals at Pech-de-l'Azé I used manganese dioxide in fire-making and produced fire on demand.

SUBMITTER: Heyes PJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4770591 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Selection and Use of Manganese Dioxide by Neanderthals.

Heyes Peter J PJ   Anastasakis Konstantinos K   de Jong Wiebren W   van Hoesel Annelies A   Roebroeks Wil W   Soressi Marie M  

Scientific reports 20160229


Several Mousterian sites in France have yielded large numbers of small black blocs. The usual interpretation is that these 'manganese oxides' were collected for their colouring properties and used in body decoration, potentially for symbolic expression. Neanderthals habitually used fire and if they needed black material for decoration, soot and charcoal were readily available, whereas obtaining manganese oxides would have incurred considerably higher costs. Compositional analyses lead us to infe  ...[more]

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