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CRO-MAGNON


A Cro-Magnon male skull

'Cro-Magnon man' ( or anglicised ) is one of the main types of ''Homo sapiens'' of the European Upper Paleolithic. It is named after the cave of Crô-Magnon in southwest France, where the first specimen was found.
The term falls outside the usual naming conventions for early humans and is used in a general sense to describe the oldest modern people in Europe, though also a specific (but very frequent) subtype among their fossil remains.

Contents
Excavations
Cro-Magnon life
Etymology
Genetics
See also
References

Excavations


The Cro-Magnon Skull

The geologist Louis Lartet discovered the first five skeletons in March 1868 in the Cro-Magnon rock shelter at Les Eyzies, Dordogne, France. The rock shelter contained a large cavity which protected the fossils.
The type specimen from this find is Cro-Magnon 1. The skeletons showed the same high forehead, upright posture and slender (''gracile'') skeleton as modern humans. Other specimens have since come to light in other parts of Europe and in the Middle East. The European individuals probably descended from an East Africa origin via South Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and even North Africa from a genetic perspective [1] [1] (cromagnoid populations of ''Mechta El Arbi'' and ''Afalou bou Rummel'').
The condition and placement of the remains along with pieces of shell and animal tooth in what appears to have been pendants or necklaces raises the question whether or not they were buried intentionally. If Cro-Magnons buried their dead intentionally it suggests they had a knowledge of ritual, by burying their dead with necklaces and tools, or an idea of disease and that the bodies needed to be contained.[2]
Analysis of the pathology of the skeletons shows that the humans of this time period led a physically difficult life. In addition to infection, several of the individuals found at the shelter had fused vertebrae in their necks indicating traumatic injury, and the adult female found at the shelter had survived for some time with a skull fracture. As these injuries would be life threatening even today, this may show that Cro-Magnons believed in community support and took care of each others' injuries.2

Cro-Magnon life


Cro-Magnons lived from about 40,000 to 10,000 years ago in the Upper Paleolithic period of the Pleistocene epoch. Cro-Magnon were anatomically modern, only differing from their modern day descendants in Europe by their more robust physiology and slightly larger brain capacity.[3] When they arrived in Europe about 40,000 years ago, they brought with them sculpture, engraving, painting, body ornamentation, music and the painstaking decoration of utilitarian objects. They had a diet of meat, grain, wild carrots, beets, onion, turnip and other foods. All together they had a very balanced diet.
Surviving Cro-Magnon artifacts include huts, cave paintings, carvings and antler-tipped spears. The remains of tools suggest that they knew how to make woven clothing. They had huts, constructed of rocks, clay, bones, branches, and animal hide/fur. These early humans used manganese and iron oxides to paint pictures and may have created the first calendar around 15,000 years ago[4].
The flint tools found in association with the remains at Cro-Magnon have associations with the Aurignacian culture that Lartet had identified a few years before he found the skeletons.
The Cro-Magnons must have come into contact with the Neanderthals, and are often credited with causing the latter's extinction, although morphologically modern humans seem to have coexisted with Neanderthals for some 60,000 years in the Levant[5] and for more than 10,000 years in France[6].

Etymology


The "Cro-Magnon" rock shelter, located at Les Eyzies in the Dordogne in France, probably owes its name to a compound of two elements:

★ ''Cro'' is presumably a dialectal form of ''creux'', meaning "cavity" or "hollow"; such forms as ''crau, cro, crouè'' are found in French dialects, and all probably derive, through Vulgar Latin
★ ''crosus'' (not attested), from a Celtic root. [5]

★ ''Magnon'' is almost certainly the augmentative form of the Old French adjective ''magne'', from Latin ''magnus'', meaning "large" or "great" and ultimately deriving from the Proto-Indo-European root
★ (related to English ''much'').
Thus, the probable original meaning is "great cavity".[7]
According to information on display in Les Eyzies-de-Tayac, however, Magnon was simply the name of the proprietor who owned the land on which the cave is located when Lartet made his discovery in 1868.

Genetics


An Italo-Spanish research team, lead by David Caramelli, published in 2003 a study on Cro-Magnon and Neanderthal mitochondrial DNA that concluded that Neanderthal man was far outside the modern human range, while Cro-Magnon people were not just inside but well in the average of modern Europeans. mtDNA retrieved from 2 Cro-Magnon specimens was identified as Haplogroup N. [6] Haplogroup N is found amongst modern day populations of the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia and its descendant haplogroups can be seen amongst modern Europeans, Eurasians, East Asians and Native American populations. [7] [8]

See also



List of fossil sites ''(with link directory)''

List of hominina (hominid) fossils ''(with images)''

Neanderthal interaction with Cro-Magnons

Earth's Children, a series of historical fiction novels written by Jean M. Auel, taking place in ancient Europe

References


1. [2]Oppenheimer piece
2. Museum of Natural History
3. Cro-Magnon. (2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved March 9, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: [3]
4. according to a claim by Michael Rappenglueck, of the University of Munich (2000) [4]
5. Ofer Bar-Yosef & Bernard Vandermeersch, Scientific American, April 1993, 94-100
6. Brad Gravina et al, Nature, 438, 51-56 (2005)
7. Possible etymologies of Cro-Magnon.


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