Even Neanderthals had distinct preferences when it came to making dinner, study suggests
Even Neanderthals had distinct preferences when it came to making dinner, study suggests

Even Neanderthals had distinct preferences when it came to making dinner, study suggests

Analysis of bones from two caves shows prehistoric people butchered the same animals in different ways
Nothing turns up the heat in a kitchen quite like debating the best way to chop an onion. Now researchers have found even our prehistoric cousins had distinct preferences when it came to preparing food.
Archaeologists studying animal bones recovered from two caves in northern Israel have found different groups of Neanderthals, living at around the same time, butchered the same animals in different ways.
“It means that within all the Neanderthal population, you have several distinct groups that have distinct ways of doing things, even for activities that are so related to survival,” said Anaëlle Jallon, of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the first author of the research.