Red Lady of Paviland

Left: the remains as seen from the feet. Right: the remains as seen from the head.

The Red Lady of Paviland is a male Upper Paleolithic partial skeleton dyed in red ochre and buried in Britain 33,000 years ago.[1] It is the oldest known ceremonial burial in Western Europe.[2]

The bones were discovered in the week of 18 January 1823, by Rev. William Buckland in an archaeological dig at Goat's Hole Cave — one of the limestone caves between Port Eynon and Rhossili, on the Gower Peninsula, south Wales.[3] Buckland believed the remains to be those of a female, dating to Roman Britain. Later analysis, however, showed the remains to have been of a young male.

Goat's Hole was occupied repeatedly throughout prehistory. Artefacts are predominantly Aurignacian, but there are earlier Mousterian, and later Gravettian and Creswellian ones as well.[4]

A map showing findings of Upper Paleolithic art across Europe.

Discovery

In 1822 Daniel Davies and the Rev John Davies, respectively surgeon and curate at Port Eynon on the south coast of Gower, explored the cave and found animal bones, including the tusk of a mammoth. The Talbot family of Penrice Castle was informed and Mary Theresa Talbot, then the oldest unmarried daughter, joined an expedition to the site and found "bones of elephants" on 27 December 1822.

William Buckland, Professor of Geology at Oxford University and a correspondent of that well-connected family, was contacted. He arrived on 18 January 1823 and spent a week at Goat's Hole, during which his famous discovery took place.[5]

Later that year, writing about his find in his book Reliquiae Diluvianae (Evidence of the Flood), Buckland stated:

"I found the skeleton enveloped by a coating of a kind of ruddle ... which stained the earth, and in some parts extended itself to the distance of about half an inch [12 mm] around the surface of the bones ... Close to that part of the thigh bone where the pocket is usually worn surrounded also by ruddle [were] about two handfuls of the Nerita littoralis [periwinkle shells]. At another part of the skeleton, viz in contact with the ribs [were] forty or fifty fragments of ivory rods [also] some small fragments of rings made of the same ivory and found with the rods ... Both rods and rings, as well as the Nerite shells, were stained superficially with red, and lay in the same red substance that enveloped the bones."

When Buckland first discovered the skeleton in 1823,[6] he misjudged both its age and its gender. As a creationist,[7] Buckland believed no human remains could have been older than the Biblical Great Flood, and thus wildly underestimated its true age, believing the remains to date to the Roman era.[4] Buckland believed the skeleton was female in large part because it was discovered with decorative items, including perforated seashell necklaces and jewellery thought to be of elephant ivory but now known to be carved from the tusk of a mammoth.[8] These decorative items, combined with the skeleton's red dye, caused Buckland to mistakenly speculate that the remains belonged to a Roman prostitute or witch.

Findings

By the time a second archaeological excavation was undertaken to Paviland Cave in 1912, it was recognized through comparison with other discoveries that had been made in Europe, that the remains were from the Palaeolithic; although before carbon dating was invented in the 1950s, there was no way of determining the actual age of any prehistoric remains.[5] Early carbon dating has tended to underestimate the age of samples and as radio carbon dating techniques have developed and become more accurate, so the age of the Red Lady of Paviland has gradually been pushed back.

In the 1960s Kenneth Oakley published a radiocarbon determination made on the actual bones of the "Red Lady" at 18,460 ± 340 BP.[5] Tests made in 1989 and 1995 suggested he lived about 26,000 years ago (26,350 ± 550 BP, OxA-1815) at the end of the Upper Paleolithic Period. In 2007 a new examination of the remains by Thomas Higham of Oxford University and Roger Jacobi of the British Museum suggested they were 29,000 years old.[9]

In 2009 a recalibration of the test results suggested an age of 33,000 years. Although now on the coast, at the time of the burial, the cave would have been located approximately 70 miles inland, overlooking a plain. When the remains were dated to some 26,000 years ago, it was thought the "Red Lady" lived at a time when an ice sheet of the most recent glacial period, in the British Isles called the Devensian Glaciation, would have been advancing towards the site, and that consequently the weather would have been more like that of present-day Siberia, with maximum temperatures of perhaps 10°C in summer, −20° in winter, and a tundra vegetation. The new dating however indicates he lived at a warmer period.

Bone protein analysis indicates that the "lady" lived on a diet that consisted of between 15% and 20% fish, which, together with the distance from the sea, suggests that the people may have been semi-nomadic, or that the tribe transported the body from a coastal region for burial. Other food probably included mammoth, the woolly rhinoceros and reindeer.

When the skeleton was first found, Wales had no museum in which to keep it, so it was housed at Oxford University, where Buckland was a professor. In December 2007 it was loaned for a year to the National Museum Cardiff. Subsequent excavations of the area in which the skeleton was found have yielded more than 4,000 flints, teeth and bones, and needles and bracelets, which are on exhibit at Swansea Museum and the National Museum in Cardiff.

Long Hole Cave

Analysis of the evidence from the two excavations at Long Hole Cave on the Gower Peninsula, including sediment and pollen as well as the lithic evidence, has identified Long Hole as an Aurignacian site contemporary with and related to the site at Paviland, evidence of the first modern humans in Britain.[10]

Red Lady Arts Project

The story of the Red Lady was the focus of an arts project supported by a Steps to New Music Award from the Arts Council of Wales and premiered in Carmarthen, west Wales, on 1 April 2010.[11] The project featured a cantata, "Y Dyn Unig" (The Lonely Man), composed by Andrew Powell, with libretto by Menna Elfyn, for tenor, harp, mixed choir, children's chorus and brass band. The work was first performed by Robyn Lyn (tenor), Royal Harpist Claire Jones, Cor Seingar and the Burry Port Town Band, and was conducted by Craig Roberts and presented by science author Mark Brake.[12]

See also

General:

References

  1. "Out of Africa: modern human origins special feature: isotopic evidence for the diets of European Neanderthals and early modern humans". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 106 (38): 16034–9. September 2009. PMC 2752538Freely accessible. PMID 19706482. doi:10.1073/pnas.0903821106.
  2. Callaway, Ewen (2 May 2012). "Archaeology: Date with history". Nature. 485 (7396). doi:10.1038/485027a.
  3. "Ancient skeleton was 'even older'". BBC News website. BBC. 30 October 2007. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  4. 1 2 Aldhouse-Green, Stephen (2001). Denison, Simon, ed. "Great Sites: Paviland Cave". British Archaeology. Council for British Archaeology (61). ISSN 1357-4442. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba61/feat3.shtml
  6. Sommer, Marianne Bones and ochre: the curious afterlife of the Red Lady of Paviland (2007) p. 1
  7. www.oum.ox.ac, accessed August 3, 2008
  8. Sykes, Brian, Blood of the Isles pages 15-17 (Bantam, 2006)
    • Jacobi, R.M and Higham, T.F.G: ‘The ‘Red Lady’ ages gracefully: New Ultrafiltration AMS determinations from Paviland,’ Journal of Human Evolution, 2008
  9. Dinnis, R (2012). "Identification Of Longhole (Gower) As An Aurignacian Site". Lithics: the Journal of the Lithic Studies Society. 33: 17–29. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  10. Llongyfarchiadau Band Pres Porth Tywyn, accessed 31 July 2010
  11. "The Red Lady of Paviland". Craig Roberts. Retrieved May 20, 2016.

Coordinates: 51°33′0.31″N 4°15′18.67″W / 51.5500861°N 4.2551861°W / 51.5500861; -4.2551861

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