PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

On the Quina side: A Neanderthal bone industry at Chez-Pinaud site, France.

  • Malvina Baumann,
  • Hugues Plisson,
  • Serge Maury,
  • Sylvain Renou,
  • Hélène Coqueugniot,
  • Nicolas Vanderesse,
  • Ksenyia Kolobova,
  • Svetlana Shnaider,
  • Veerle Rots,
  • Guillaume Guérin,
  • William Rendu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284081
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6
p. e0284081

Abstract

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Did Neanderthal produce a bone industry? The recent discovery of a large bone tool assemblage at the Neanderthal site of Chagyrskaya (Altai, Siberia, Russia) and the increasing discoveries of isolated finds of bone tools in various Mousterian sites across Eurasia stimulate the debate. Assuming that the isolate finds may be the tip of the iceberg and that the Siberian occurrence did not result from a local adaptation of easternmost Neanderthals, we looked for evidence of a similar industry in the Western side of their spread area. We assessed the bone tool potential of the Quina bone-bed level currently under excavation at chez Pinaud site (Jonzac, Charente-Maritime, France) and found as many bone tools as flint ones: not only the well-known retouchers but also beveled tools, retouched artifacts and a smooth-ended rib. Their diversity opens a window on a range of activities not expected in a butchering site and not documented by the flint tools, all involved in the carcass processing. The re-use of 20% of the bone blanks, which are mainly from large ungulates among faunal remains largely dominated by reindeer, raises the question of blank procurement and management. From the Altai to the Atlantic shore, through a multitude of sites where only a few objects have been reported so far, evidence of a Neanderthal bone industry is emerging which provides new insights on Middle Paleolithic subsistence strategies.