Anthropology
Related: About this forumNeanderthal adhesives were made through a complex synthesis process
Birch bark was heated in underground chambers to create a tougher adhesive.
ELIZABETH RAYNE - 6/17/2023, 6:25 AM
As Homo sapiens, we often consider ourselves to be the most intelligent hominins. But that doesnt mean our species was the first to discover everything; it appears that Neanderthals found a way to manufacture synthetics long before we ever did.
Neanderthal tools might look relatively simple, but new research shows that Homo neanderthalensis devised a method of generating a glue derived from birch tar to hold them together about 200,000 years agoand it was tough. This ancient superglue made bone and stone adhere to wood, was waterproof, and didnt decompose. The tar was also used a hundred thousand years before modern humans came up with anything synthetic.
A transformation
After studying ancient tools that carry residue from this glue, a team of researchers from the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen and other institutions in Germany found evidence that this glue wasnt just the original tar; it had been transformed in some way. This raises the question of what was involved in that transformation.
To see how Neanderthals could have converted birch tar into glue, the research team tried several different processing methods. Any suspicion that the tar came directly from birch trees didnt hold up because birch trees do not secrete anything that worked as an adhesive. So what kind of processing was needed?
More:
https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/06/neanderthals-seem-to-be-the-first-humans-to-make-synthetic-materials/
Lovie777
(14,806 posts)progressed like their counter part if they were more adhered to environmental changes. But who know, they could have, there are still patches of land that still needs to be discovered.
Some believe a group of Homo Sapiens or Neanderthals or other similar human like retreated back to the ocean.