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Scooped by David Connolly onto Archaeology Articles and Books |
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Unique compared with recent and prehistoric Homo sapiens, Neandertal humeri are characterised by a pronounced right-dominant bilateral strength asymmetry and an anteroposteriorly strengthened diaphyseal shape. Remodeling in response to asymmetric forces imposed during regular underhanded spear thrusting is the most influential explanatory hypothesis. The core tenet of the “Spear Thrusting Hypothesis”, that underhand thrusting requires greater muscle activity on the right side of the body compared to the left, remains untested. It is unclear whether alternative subsistence behaviours, such as hide processing, might better explain this morphology. To test this, electromyography was used to measure muscle activity at the primary movers of the humerus (pectoralis major (PM), anterior (AD) and posterior deltoid (PD)) during three distinct spear-thrusting tasks and four separate scraping tasks. Contrary to predictions, maximum muscle activity (MAX) and total muscle activity (TOT) were significantly higher (all values, p<.05) at the left (non-dominant) AD, PD and PM compared to the right side of the body during spear thrusting tasks. Thus, the muscle activity required during underhanded spearing tasks does not lend itself to explaining the pronounced right dominant strength asymmetry found in Neandertal humeri. In contrast, during the performance of all three unimanual scraping tasks, right side MAX and TOT were significantly greater at the AD (all values, p<.01) and PM (all values, p<.02) compared to the left. The consistency of the results provides evidence that scraping activities, such as hide preparation, may be a key behaviour in determining the unusual pattern of Neandertal arm morphology. Overall, these results yield important insight into the Neandertal behavioural repertoire that aided survival throughout Pleistocene Eurasia. Delete the scoop?
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Ageröds Mosse and Rönneholms Mosse together form a north-westerly arm of the Ringsjö basin of central Scania.
These peat-bogs indicate the extent of a prehistoric lake that was filled by organic sediment during the late Atlantic and Subatlantic chronozones.
A number of Mesolithic sites, dating to the Maglemose and Kongemose cultures, have been found during peat cutting in Ageröds Mosse before the 1960s (Althin 1954; Larsson 1978, 1983).
Hafted microlithsA special object was recovered from a patch of scattered finds in 2009. It consisted of pieces of wood and microliths, some attached by resin to the pieces of wood. The flints and wood could be re-assembled to form the point of an arrow with a length of 10.2cm and a diameter of 0.9cm