New Clues Why Neanderthals Visited La Cotte de St Brelade In Jersey 250,000 Years Ago

Conny Waters – AncientPages.com –  Previous archaeological excavations in Jersey revealed Neanderthals visited La Cotte de St Brelade, a coastal cave for over 100,000 years. The cave was of great importance to the Neanderthals, and it was considered a special place.

New Clues Why Neanderthals Visited La Cotte de St Brelade In Jersey 250,000 Years Ago

La Cotte à la Chèvre, a small cave near Grosnez on the north coast. Credit: Jersey Heritage

“La Cotte seems to have been a special place for Neanderthals. They kept making deliberate journeys to reach the site over many, many generations. We can use the stone tools they left behind to map how they were moving through landscapes, which are now beneath the English Channel. About 180,000 years ago, as ice caps expanded and temperatures plummeted, they would have been exploiting a huge offshore area, inaccessible to us today,” Dr. Andy Shaw of the Centre for the Archaeology of Human Origins (CAHO) at the University of Southampton said.

Scientists have now revisited the intriguing cave in Jersey and found evidence Neanderthals were familiar with La Cotte de St Brelade much earlier than previously thought. Based on collected artifacts unearthed at the site, the research team determined Neanderthals lived and hunted in Jersey 250,000 years ago.

Led by Dr. Josie Mills, the Jersey Heritage team will now examine and catalog 16,000 stone tools, animal bones, and sediment samples from the site.

Most artifacts have been stored in bags or boxes since they were excavated in the early 20th Century and 1960s, according to Jersey Heritage.

“La Cotte à la Chèvre is an important site for understanding Jersey’s Ice Age past.

“By repackaging and cataloguing the artefacts, we hope to reveal more about how Neanderthals used this site and how it compares to the larger and better-known La Cotte de St Brelade at Ouaisné,” Dr. Mills told the BBC.

Scientists have long been interested in how and why this site became ‘persistent’ in the minds of early Neanderthals.

You can almost see hints of early mapping in the way they are traveling to it again and again, or certainly an understanding of their geography. But specifically what drew them to Jersey so often is harder to tease out.

It might have been that the whole Island was highly visible from a long way off — like a waymarker — or people might have remembered that shelter could be found there, and pᴀssed that knowledge on,” Dr Beccy Scott of the British Museum said.

Based on the findings in the region, scientists now think that La Cotte de St Brelade is probably the most important Neanderthal site in northern Europe and could be one of the last known places that Neanderthals survived in the region.

“It was certainly as important to them as it is to us, as we try and understand how they thrived and survived for 200,000 years,” Dr. Matt Pope, of the Insтιтute of Archaeology at UCL said.

The latest study can shed new light on the Neanderthals’ persistence to visit the cave in Jersey for so long.

Written by Conny Waters – AncientPages.com Staff Writer

Related Posts

Andalusia Was First Inhabited By Neolithic People From The Southern Part Of The Iberian Peninsula 6,200 Years Ago

Andalusia Was First Inhabited By Neolithic People From The Southern Part Of The Iberian Peninsula 6,200 Years Ago

Conny Waters – AncientPages.com – The island of San Fernando, Cadiz in Andalusia, was home to the first Neolithic farmers and shepherds who decided to permanently settle there around 6,200 years ago. They practised shellfish collection and consumption all year round, with a preference for winter. Location of Campo de Hockey site in southern Iberian […]

Unknown Bronze Age Settlement Discovered Accidently In Heimberg, Switzerland

Unknown Bronze Age Settlement Discovered Accidentally In Heimberg, Switzerland

Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com – Sometimes, when archaeologists look for one thing, they find something entirely different. This is exactly what happened in Switzerland when researchers were excavating, hoping to find an ancient Roman brick workshop, but they unearthed a previously unknown Bronze Age settlement instead. The excavation in Heimberg, on the right edge of […]

Unexplained Mystery Of The Dangerous Invisible And Unidentifiable Enemy In A French Town

Unexplained Mystery Of The Dangerous Invisible Enemy In A French Town

Ellen Lloyd – AncientPages.com – It was an ordinary day in a small, sleepy town in France. There were no indications anything strange was about to happen. Yet, an inexplicable and extraordinary event left the unsuspecting residents completely bewildered and unsure of what was unfolding. The situation that unfolded was indeed unusual, if not bizarre. […]

Rare 2,800-Year-Old Assyrian Scarab Amulet Found In Lower Galilee

Rare 2,800-Year-Old ᴀssyrian Scarab Amulet Found In Lower Galilee

Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com – Erez Avrahamov, a 45-year-old inhabitant of Peduel, made an incredible discovery while hiking in the Tabor Stream Nature Reserve located in Lower Galilee. He stumbled upon an ancient seal shaped like a scarab that dates back to the First Temple period. Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority This ancient artifact is as […]

Dinas Powys: Late ‘Antique Hillfort Phenomenon’ In Post-Roman Western Britain

Dinas Powys: Late ‘Antique Hillfort Phenomenon’ In Post-Roman Western Britain

Conny Waters – AncientPages.com – Dinas Powys, Glamorgan, located about 9km southwest of Cardiff, is a small inland fort of approximately 0.35ha. The hillfort was first excavated by a team of archaeologists led by Leslie Alcock from 1954 through to 1958. The site is often referenced as a prime example of elite settlements in post-Roman […]

Puzzling Vasconic Inscription On Ancient Irulegi Hand Resembles Basque Language

Puzzling Vasconic Inscription On Ancient Irulegi Hand Resembles Basque Language

Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com – A few years ago, archaeologists excavating an Iron Age site known as Irulegi in northern Spain discovered a flat bronze artifact shaped like a human hand. After careful cleaning, they found it bore inscriptions of words from a Vasconic language. This language family includes Basque and several other languages that […]