Man played music '40,000 years ago'
Press Association
Scientists
say music was flourishing in Europe long before the birth of Mozart
(PA/Royal
Society)
Music was
flourishing in Europe many thousands of years before the birth of Mozart,
Brahms and Beethoven, scientists have learned.
The great
composers' earliest ancestors were playing musical instruments and showing
artistic creativity more than 40,000 years ago, a study has shown.
Evidence
of the musicians was unearthed in Germany in the form of primitive flutes made
from bird bones and mammoth ivory.
A new
system of fossil dating confirmed the age of animal bones excavated in the same
rock layers as the instruments and examples of early art. The bones, probably
the remains of meals, bore cuts and marks from hunting and eating.
The finds,
described in the Journal of Human Evolution, are from Geissenkloesterle Cave in
the Swabian Jura region of southern Germany. They show that the Aurignacian
culture, a way of living linked with early modern humans, existed at the site
between 42,000 and 43,000 years ago. It suggests that some of the first
"modern" humans to arrive in central Europe had a musical bent.
Professor
Nick Conard, from Tubingen University in Germany, who took part in the
excavation, said: "These results are consistent with a hypothesis we made
several years ago that the Danube River was a key corridor for the movement of
humans and technological innovations into central Europe between 40,000 to
45,000 years ago.
"Geissenkloesterle
is one of several caves in the region that has produced important examples of
personal ornaments, figurative art, mythical imagery and musical instruments.
The new dates prove the great antiquity of the Aurignacian in Swabia."
The
results indicate that modern humans entered the Upper Danube region before an
extremely cold climatic phase around 39,000-40,000 years ago. Previously,
experts had argued that modern humans only migrated up the Danube immediately
after this event.
Prof Tom
Higham, of Oxford University, who led the team which dated the bones, said:
"Modern humans during the Aurignacian period were in central Europe at
least 2,000-3,000 years before this climatic deterioration, when huge icebergs
calved from ice sheets in the northern Atlantic and temperatures plummeted.
"The
question is what effect this downturn might have had on the people in Europe at
the time."
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