Welsh skeleton re-dated: even older!

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The Red Lady of Paviland, discovered in a cave on Gower (Wales) in the 1820s may be 4,000 years older than previously thought.


Scientists say more accurate tests date the earliest human burial found in the UK to just over 29,000 years ago. Initially, the bones were thought to be around 18,000 years old, but were later redated to between 25,000 and 26,000. The team from Oxford University and the British Museum said new dating techniques provided more accurate results.

The skeleton of the Red Lady – actually a young male – was discovered at Goat's Hole Cave at Paviland on Gower in 1823 by William Buckland, then a geology professor at Oxford University. It owes its name to the red ochre covering the bones. The remains were found along with a number of artefacts including ivory wands, bracelets and periwinkle shells.  Dr Thomas Higham of Oxford University said he and his colleague Dr Roger Jacobi of the British Museum had now done further tests and were 'confident' of the new results. "The remains and artefacts were previously difficult to date accurately," said Dr Higham. "Many of the bones were treated with preservations in the 19th Century and some of this contamination is often difficult to remove." He said their analysis was the bones were 'just over' 29,000 years old. It would mean The Red Lady lived in an age when the climate was much warmer than it would have been 4,000 years later. Dr Higham added: "The data that we have got now is making a lot more sense." He said it 'might' suggest that the custom of burying people with artefacts originated in western Europe rather than eastern Europe as had previously been thought.

The remains of the Red Lady are to form part of a new exhibition opening at the National Museum Wales in Cardiff in December. The full findings of the new research are due to be published in the Journal of Human Evolution early next year.

Source: BBC News (30/10/2007)

Dr Thomas Higham of Oxford University will be speaking about AMS Radiocarbon dating and the transitions from Neanderthals  to modern humans in Europe at the Archaeology 2008 conference February 9-10 at the British Museum. Tickets on sale now!

 

 

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