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New Research Reveals Schöningen Spears Are 100,000 Years Younger Than Previously Believed

May 15, 2025
in Athmospheric
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A groundbreaking new study has redefined the timeline of one of archaeology’s most extraordinary discoveries—the Schöningen spears—revealing a far more recent age than previously thought. These remarkable wooden hunting weapons, unearthed in Lower Saxony, Germany, offer unparalleled insight into the sophisticated behavior of early humans, particularly Neanderthals. Utilizing recent advances in amino acid geochronology, researchers have precisely dated the spears to approximately 200,000 years ago, situating them firmly within the Middle Palaeolithic period and marking an intensification of cooperative hunting and social complexity among Neanderthals.

The Schöningen spears, first discovered in the mid-1990s, had originally been estimated to be around 400,000 years old, though this figure was later revised to about 300,000 years based on the analysis of sediment layers underlying the archaeological site. However, these earlier methods lacked direct material evidence from the exact depositional strata where the spears were found, leaving chronological uncertainties. The latest study overcomes this limitation by employing an innovative biochemical dating technique that directly examines the fossils embedded in the same sediment layer as these ancient weapons.

Central to the study’s success is amino acid geochronology, a sophisticated method refined by a team led by Professor Kirsty Penkman from the University of York. This approach capitalizes on the molecular properties of amino acids, which exist in two mirror-image forms, or enantiomers: left-handed (L) and right-handed (D) molecules. Living organisms predominantly synthesize proteins composed of L-amino acids, but after death, these amino acids undergo a slow and predictable transformation into their D-forms. By quantifying the ratio of L to D amino acids in preserved biominerals, scientists can establish the time elapsed since the organism’s death, providing a direct chronological marker.

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The research team analyzed the opercula—small, door-like structures—of freshwater snails belonging to the genus Bithynia discovered within the sedimentary matrix that housed the Schöningen spears. These opercula are composed of a mineral that seals the amino acids inside, effectively serving as natural time capsules that retain biochemical signals for hundreds of thousands of years. By sampling and measuring the amino acid racemization in these snail opercula, the researchers precisely dated the sediment layer, offering a direct age for the context in which the spears were embedded.

To corroborate their findings, the team extended their analysis to include similar biochemical tests on horse teeth and microfossils called ostracods recovered from the same location. These additional lines of evidence were explored by an independent group in Madrid, Spain, whose findings aligned with the amino acid data from York. This interdisciplinary and cross-regional validation solidifies the consensus that the Schöningen site is younger than previously believed, dating to around 200,000 years ago.

The revised dating holds immense significance for our understanding of Neanderthal behavior. The Schöningen spears represent the earliest direct evidence for spearthrower-style hunting technology, implying advanced cognitive abilities such as complex planning, communication, and social cooperation. This discovery pushes the boundaries of what is known about Neanderthal firearm-related capabilities and their hunting strategies, revealing an evolutionary leap in hunting efficiency and group coordination far earlier than anticipated.

The site itself offers a rare glimpse into an ancient lacustrine environment where rapid sedimentation preserved organic materials with exceptional fidelity. Alongside the spears, archaeologists have uncovered butchered remains of horses, indicating highly organized hunting practices targeting sizeable and challenging prey. Previous investigations by institutions such as the MONREPOS Archaeological Research Centre have revealed evidence for seasonal hunting in this region, with over 50 individual horses documented, suggesting coordinated group efforts with specialized roles.

By dating the spears to around 200,000 years ago, the study implies that Neanderthals had reached a sophisticated level of societal organization by this time, involving strategic planning, knowledge transmission, and perhaps even the early forms of language or symbolic communication. These findings challenge earlier perspectives that tended to view Neanderthals as cognitively inferior to Homo sapiens and paint a far richer picture of their cultural complexity.

Amino acid geochronology, as a biochemical clock, represents a monumental leap forward in archaeological dating techniques. Its ability to directly date fossilized biominerals in diverse sedimentary contexts worldwide opens new avenues for revisiting numerous Palaeolithic sites whose ages have hitherto been ambiguous or disputed. This novel approach thus has the potential to reshape timelines and interpretations of human evolution on a global scale, enhancing our understanding of archaic human behavior and technological progress.

Professor Kirsty Penkman, reflecting on the study’s impact, highlighted that the precision of this dating method can reshape prehistorians’ and archaeologists’ views on the Middle Palaeolithic era. By unlocking previously inaccessible chronological information, it reveals a more dynamic and intricate pattern of hominin activity and the development of complex social behaviors that underpin human evolution itself.

Dr. Jarod Hutson, the study’s first author, emphasized that the sophistication required for the manufacture and use of the Schöningen spears underscores advanced neural and social capacities among Neanderthals. The new dating aligns the site with a constellation of contemporaneous archaeological evidence pointing to a transformative period in early human hunting behavior—one marked by increased cooperation, strategic communication, and technological innovation.

The collaborative nature of the research, involving institutions across Europe and North America, testifies to the ongoing commitment to unraveling the intricacies of human prehistory through cutting-edge science. Combining biochemical dating with archaeological and paleoenvironmental data has yielded a coherent and compelling narrative, reinforcing the Schöningen spears as one of the most iconic testaments to early Neanderthal ingenuity and societal complexity.

As amino acid geochronology continues to be refined and applied to other archaeological contexts, it is poised to revolutionize our comprehension of the timing and pace of human evolution. The technique’s ability to capture molecular time signals locked within fossilized shells and teeth represents a powerful new tool in the ongoing quest to illuminate the deep past of our species and our closest extinct relatives.

-ENDS-


Subject of Research: Revised dating of the Schöningen hunting spears to approximately 200,000 years ago, indicating intensification of Neanderthal cooperative behavior during the Middle Palaeolithic.

Article Title: Revised age for Schöningen hunting spears indicates intensification of Neanderthal cooperative behavior around 200,000 years ago

News Publication Date: 9-May-2025

Web References:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adv0752

Image Credits:
Photo: MINKUSIMAGES. With kind permission of the copyright holder: Niedersächsisches Landesamt für Denkmalpflege (NLD)

Keywords:
Prehistoric archaeology, Archaeological sites, Middle Palaeolithic, Neanderthal behavior, Amino acid geochronology, Schöningen spears, Human evolution, Biochemical dating, Cooperative hunting, Archaeological dating methods

Tags: advancements in dating techniquesamino acid geochronology researcharchaeological discoveries in Germanychronological uncertainties in archaeologycooperative hunting among NeanderthalsLower Saxony archaeological siteMiddle Palaeolithic archaeologyNeanderthal hunting weaponsprehistoric human behaviorProfessor Kirsty Penkman findingsSchöningen spears datingsediment layer analysis
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