<p class="title">Neanderthals were capable of sophisticated, collective hunting strategies, according to an analysis of prehistoric animal remains from Germany that contradicts the enduring image of these early humans as knuckle-dragging brutes.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The cut marks -- or "hunting lesions" -- on the bones of two 120,000-year-old deer provide the earliest "smoking gun" evidence such weapons were used to stalk and kill prey, according to a study the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Microscopic imaging and ballistics experiments reproducing the impact of the blows confirmed that at least one was delivered with a wooden spear at low velocity.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"This suggests that Neanderthals approached animals very closely and thrust, not threw, their spears at the animals, most likely from an underhand angle," said Sabine Gaudzinski-Windheuser, a researcher at Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"Such a confrontational way of hunting required careful planning and concealment, and close cooperation between individual hunters," she told AFP.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Neanderthals lived in Europe from about 300,000 years ago until they died out 30,000 years ago, overtaken by our species.</p>.<p class="bodytext">It was long thought that these evolutionary cousins -- modern Europeans and Asians have about two percent of Neanderthal DNA -- were not smart enough to compete and lacked symbolic culture, a trait supposedly unique to modern humans.</p>.<p class="bodytext">But recent finds have revealed a species with more intelligence and savoir-faire than suspected.</p>.<p class="bodytext">They buried their dead in ritual fashion, created tools, and painted animal frescos on cave walls at least 64,000 years ago, 20,000 years before homo sapiens arrived in Europe.<br /><br />Hominins -- the term used to describe early human species, as well as our own -- most likely started hunting with weapons more than half-a-million years ago.</p>.<p class="bodytext">300,000- to 400,000-year-old wooden staves found in England and Germany are the oldest known spear-like implements likely used for killing prey. But there was no physical evidence as to their use, leaving scientists to speculate.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The new find from the Neumark-Nord area of Germany removes that doubt, said Gaudzinski-Windheuser.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"As far as spear use is concerned, We now finally have the 'crime scene' fitting to the proverbial 'smoking gun'," she said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Lake shore excavations from the same site since the 1980s have yielded tens of thousands of bones from large mammals, including red and fallow deer, horses and bovids.</p>.<p class="bodytext">They have also turned up thousands of stone artefacts, attesting to a flourishing Neanderthal presence in what was a forest environment during an interglacial period 135,000 and 115,000 years ago.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The old deer bones examined for the study were unearthed more than 20 years ago, but new technologies helped unlock their secrets: which injuries were lethal, what kind of weapon was used, and whether the spears were thrown from a distance or thrust from close up.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The damage done was also especially pronounced, making "the forensic style replication and analysis in this paper possible," wrote Annemieke Milks, a researcher at the Institute of Archaeology at University College London.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"The ballistics work is experimental archaeology at its best," she commented, also in Nature Ecology and Evolution.</p>.<p class="bodytext">We should also allow for the possibility that Neanderthals threw their spears as well, she added.</p>
<p class="title">Neanderthals were capable of sophisticated, collective hunting strategies, according to an analysis of prehistoric animal remains from Germany that contradicts the enduring image of these early humans as knuckle-dragging brutes.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The cut marks -- or "hunting lesions" -- on the bones of two 120,000-year-old deer provide the earliest "smoking gun" evidence such weapons were used to stalk and kill prey, according to a study the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Microscopic imaging and ballistics experiments reproducing the impact of the blows confirmed that at least one was delivered with a wooden spear at low velocity.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"This suggests that Neanderthals approached animals very closely and thrust, not threw, their spears at the animals, most likely from an underhand angle," said Sabine Gaudzinski-Windheuser, a researcher at Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"Such a confrontational way of hunting required careful planning and concealment, and close cooperation between individual hunters," she told AFP.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Neanderthals lived in Europe from about 300,000 years ago until they died out 30,000 years ago, overtaken by our species.</p>.<p class="bodytext">It was long thought that these evolutionary cousins -- modern Europeans and Asians have about two percent of Neanderthal DNA -- were not smart enough to compete and lacked symbolic culture, a trait supposedly unique to modern humans.</p>.<p class="bodytext">But recent finds have revealed a species with more intelligence and savoir-faire than suspected.</p>.<p class="bodytext">They buried their dead in ritual fashion, created tools, and painted animal frescos on cave walls at least 64,000 years ago, 20,000 years before homo sapiens arrived in Europe.<br /><br />Hominins -- the term used to describe early human species, as well as our own -- most likely started hunting with weapons more than half-a-million years ago.</p>.<p class="bodytext">300,000- to 400,000-year-old wooden staves found in England and Germany are the oldest known spear-like implements likely used for killing prey. But there was no physical evidence as to their use, leaving scientists to speculate.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The new find from the Neumark-Nord area of Germany removes that doubt, said Gaudzinski-Windheuser.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"As far as spear use is concerned, We now finally have the 'crime scene' fitting to the proverbial 'smoking gun'," she said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Lake shore excavations from the same site since the 1980s have yielded tens of thousands of bones from large mammals, including red and fallow deer, horses and bovids.</p>.<p class="bodytext">They have also turned up thousands of stone artefacts, attesting to a flourishing Neanderthal presence in what was a forest environment during an interglacial period 135,000 and 115,000 years ago.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The old deer bones examined for the study were unearthed more than 20 years ago, but new technologies helped unlock their secrets: which injuries were lethal, what kind of weapon was used, and whether the spears were thrown from a distance or thrust from close up.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The damage done was also especially pronounced, making "the forensic style replication and analysis in this paper possible," wrote Annemieke Milks, a researcher at the Institute of Archaeology at University College London.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"The ballistics work is experimental archaeology at its best," she commented, also in Nature Ecology and Evolution.</p>.<p class="bodytext">We should also allow for the possibility that Neanderthals threw their spears as well, she added.</p>