1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:09,480 [tense, mysterious music playing] 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 4 00:00:26,160 --> 00:00:27,920 [wind whistling, rustling] 5 00:00:33,920 --> 00:00:37,360 [Sir Patrick Stewart] Long ago, the plains of East Africa 6 00:00:37,360 --> 00:00:40,440 were home to our distant ancestors. 7 00:00:42,960 --> 00:00:44,960 [tense music continues] 8 00:00:47,000 --> 00:00:51,080 [Stewart] For reasons lost to time, some of these ancestors 9 00:00:51,680 --> 00:00:55,280 decided to leave and headed north 10 00:00:55,880 --> 00:00:59,080 to become the Neanderthals. 11 00:01:04,840 --> 00:01:06,960 Over time their numbers grew. 12 00:01:09,600 --> 00:01:15,200 Their territories stretching from Russia to the Atlantic Coast. 13 00:01:21,160 --> 00:01:25,480 {\an8}Small clans roaming across this vast wilderness. 14 00:01:30,280 --> 00:01:36,040 Surviving against the odds for over 300,000 years 15 00:01:36,800 --> 00:01:38,200 until, suddenly, 16 00:01:39,360 --> 00:01:40,480 they disappeared. 17 00:01:45,320 --> 00:01:49,200 {\an8}Only in a few places, have their remains survived, 18 00:01:50,000 --> 00:01:52,120 and one of the most significant 19 00:01:53,000 --> 00:01:54,960 is found in the Middle East, 20 00:01:55,480 --> 00:01:58,040 an archaeological treasure trove 21 00:01:58,040 --> 00:02:01,080 {\an8}hidden deep in the mountains of Kurdistan, 22 00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:03,960 {\an8}Shanidar Cave. 23 00:02:09,360 --> 00:02:11,080 [man in Kurdish] The Shanidar Cave 24 00:02:11,080 --> 00:02:16,800 is regarded as one of the most revered caves in the world 25 00:02:17,760 --> 00:02:20,840 during the time of the Neanderthals and Homo Sapiens. 26 00:02:21,640 --> 00:02:27,640 In a place where life has been ever present, 27 00:02:27,640 --> 00:02:30,640 we might find answers to questions. 28 00:02:31,640 --> 00:02:34,240 Questions that are still mysterious. 29 00:02:37,320 --> 00:02:39,800 [Stewart] Who were the Neanderthals? 30 00:02:41,160 --> 00:02:44,600 What made them so successful for so long? 31 00:02:45,800 --> 00:02:50,240 And why, ultimately, did they disappear? 32 00:02:55,800 --> 00:02:57,800 [music fades] 33 00:03:19,680 --> 00:03:22,680 [woman] The Shanidar Cave's in the foothills of the Bradost Mountains, 34 00:03:22,680 --> 00:03:26,240 but to call them foothills doesn't conjure up the right image. 35 00:03:28,520 --> 00:03:32,680 It feels mountainous. It's quite jagged and precipitous. 36 00:03:35,160 --> 00:03:39,640 Shanidar Cave makes an impression just because of its size and its scale. 37 00:03:42,280 --> 00:03:46,480 You have to approach from below, and it's incredibly impressive. 38 00:03:50,240 --> 00:03:51,800 It's very large. 39 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:55,400 It has a very wide mouth, so it's very light. 40 00:03:57,440 --> 00:04:01,000 You have the swifts kind of flying in overhead, 41 00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:04,240 and eagles circling above, and wolves howling at night. 42 00:04:04,240 --> 00:04:06,760 It's an amazing place. 43 00:04:06,760 --> 00:04:08,200 [birds chirping] 44 00:04:08,800 --> 00:04:13,800 {\an8}And to actually be the person who's excavating that as well 45 00:04:13,800 --> 00:04:16,200 {\an8}is extremely extraordinary. 46 00:04:17,760 --> 00:04:21,160 [Stewart] Emma is part of a team of British archaeologists 47 00:04:21,160 --> 00:04:25,680 invited by their Kurdish colleagues to continue work in the cave. 48 00:04:27,640 --> 00:04:32,400 [Emma] Shanidar Cave is hugely iconic in the history of Neanderthal studies, 49 00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:37,200 and played a really pivotal role in us rethinking 50 00:04:37,200 --> 00:04:39,320 what we assumed Neanderthals did, 51 00:04:39,320 --> 00:04:42,000 and what they were like, and what they were capable of. 52 00:04:43,960 --> 00:04:47,840 The aim of the new project is to use 53 00:04:47,840 --> 00:04:51,760 the whole range of archaeological science now available to us, 54 00:04:51,760 --> 00:04:55,240 to shed new light on Neanderthal behavior. 55 00:04:57,320 --> 00:05:02,080 [Stewart] The trench has not been excavated since the 1960s. 56 00:05:02,600 --> 00:05:03,960 And since that time, 57 00:05:03,960 --> 00:05:10,120 the way we think about our closest human relatives has shifted considerably. 58 00:05:11,600 --> 00:05:14,720 We still use the word Neanderthal to describe somebody 59 00:05:14,720 --> 00:05:16,560 that's kind of oafish, whatever. 60 00:05:16,560 --> 00:05:19,800 It's still used as a term of abuse in common parlance, 61 00:05:19,800 --> 00:05:21,680 "He's a real Neanderthal." 62 00:05:21,680 --> 00:05:27,160 Archaeologically, they are more and more similar to Homo Sapiens, 63 00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:32,640 {\an8}and much of that rethinking owes its origins to the work 64 00:05:32,640 --> 00:05:36,080 {\an8}that Ralph Solecki did here in Shanidar Cave. 65 00:05:36,600 --> 00:05:38,440 [evocative music playing] 66 00:05:42,920 --> 00:05:46,320 {\an8}Ralph Solecki was born in 1917. 67 00:05:46,320 --> 00:05:48,800 He died a few years ago at a great age. 68 00:05:49,360 --> 00:05:51,200 He was incredibly tough. 69 00:05:53,320 --> 00:05:56,160 He stood on a land mine in the Second World War, 70 00:05:56,160 --> 00:05:58,240 and, miraculously, survived. 71 00:06:00,840 --> 00:06:04,160 He was clearly a very remarkable man. 72 00:06:05,800 --> 00:06:09,080 It's not clear to me precisely how he heard of Shanidar, 73 00:06:10,120 --> 00:06:17,120 {\an8}but he came here, and he worked here for five seasons between 1951 and 1960. 74 00:06:23,200 --> 00:06:24,880 He laid out a trench 75 00:06:24,880 --> 00:06:28,720 that went north-south covering most of the floor of the cave. 76 00:06:30,120 --> 00:06:32,880 [evocative music playing] 77 00:06:35,440 --> 00:06:38,160 [Graeme] Why the site became so well-known 78 00:06:38,160 --> 00:06:42,960 is he found ten Neanderthal men, women, and children. 79 00:06:44,080 --> 00:06:46,200 [upbeat electric guitar music playing] 80 00:06:53,040 --> 00:06:54,960 [music peaks, fades] 81 00:06:59,040 --> 00:07:00,800 [Barzani in Kurdish] At that time, 82 00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:03,760 we were young. 83 00:07:07,320 --> 00:07:09,640 I was approximately... 84 00:07:11,080 --> 00:07:12,880 seventeen, eighteen years old. 85 00:07:16,800 --> 00:07:18,800 The doctor taught us. 86 00:07:21,400 --> 00:07:24,320 Many stones came out of the cave, large stones. 87 00:07:25,040 --> 00:07:26,480 They used explosives. 88 00:07:29,920 --> 00:07:31,400 [explosions] 89 00:07:35,360 --> 00:07:39,560 They found the Neanderthal skeletons. It was a big deal. 90 00:07:42,920 --> 00:07:46,760 Their ribs and bones were thick. 91 00:07:47,440 --> 00:07:49,760 Their head was very large. 92 00:07:53,160 --> 00:07:54,000 Their hands, 93 00:07:55,600 --> 00:07:57,760 everything about them was striking. 94 00:07:59,200 --> 00:08:03,000 [Stewart] This was Solecki's first major discovery. 95 00:08:03,720 --> 00:08:06,320 He labelled it Shanidar 1. 96 00:08:07,240 --> 00:08:11,320 A skeleton from a species very different to our own. 97 00:08:11,320 --> 00:08:13,400 [pensive music playing] 98 00:08:15,880 --> 00:08:19,000 [Graeme] They've got rather more robust features. 99 00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:21,920 Big brow ridges and a rather differently shaped skull, 100 00:08:21,920 --> 00:08:23,680 and we have this very rounded skull. 101 00:08:23,680 --> 00:08:25,240 They're stocky. 102 00:08:26,400 --> 00:08:30,280 We assume they must have some kind of language. 103 00:08:32,240 --> 00:08:33,960 The more we know about them, 104 00:08:33,960 --> 00:08:37,000 the more it's clear that they were much more complicated 105 00:08:37,000 --> 00:08:40,000 than we thought 40, 50 years ago. 106 00:08:44,680 --> 00:08:47,360 [man in Kurdish] We call it the tree of life. 107 00:08:48,240 --> 00:08:49,960 Each human and each animal 108 00:08:50,920 --> 00:08:54,080 becomes a branch on that tree of life. 109 00:08:58,960 --> 00:09:03,800 We are one of the branches, and the Neanderthals were another. 110 00:09:06,080 --> 00:09:08,640 Somewhere along the line, we separated. 111 00:09:08,640 --> 00:09:10,480 [birds chirping] 112 00:09:10,480 --> 00:09:12,880 I truly feel 113 00:09:13,440 --> 00:09:17,960 that I am sitting on my cousin's remains. 114 00:09:21,400 --> 00:09:23,200 [clanking] 115 00:09:23,200 --> 00:09:24,720 [scraping] 116 00:09:24,720 --> 00:09:27,520 [Emma] At the moment, we are about 4.5 meters 117 00:09:27,520 --> 00:09:29,160 from the surface of the cave. 118 00:09:29,840 --> 00:09:32,600 So this is about 45,000 years ago. 119 00:09:33,280 --> 00:09:35,840 This is the level at which we have 120 00:09:35,840 --> 00:09:38,680 the burial or deposition of Shanidar 1. 121 00:09:38,680 --> 00:09:40,760 [tense, dramatic music playing] 122 00:09:50,920 --> 00:09:54,080 [Emma] He'd had an injury to the right side of his head. 123 00:09:58,800 --> 00:10:00,600 But also to the left eye, 124 00:10:00,600 --> 00:10:03,240 which might well have left him blind in that eye, 125 00:10:03,240 --> 00:10:06,120 and might be linked to some of his other injuries. 126 00:10:09,960 --> 00:10:11,960 [music continues] 127 00:10:18,760 --> 00:10:21,520 [Emma] He was also paralyzed down his right arm, 128 00:10:24,600 --> 00:10:29,480 and had both broken his right arm in more than one place, 129 00:10:29,480 --> 00:10:30,680 but also, it seems, 130 00:10:30,680 --> 00:10:34,560 that either had the lower part intentionally or accidentally removed, 131 00:10:34,560 --> 00:10:38,120 so, basically, had no right arm from just above the elbow. 132 00:10:40,720 --> 00:10:45,040 There were also other injuries. He had quite severe arthritis in his knee. 133 00:10:49,920 --> 00:10:52,240 Fractures to bones in his foot. 134 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:57,520 So perhaps in terms of, say, hunting, 135 00:10:57,520 --> 00:11:00,880 he might have not been able to hunt in the typical way, 136 00:11:00,880 --> 00:11:03,560 but had survived to a relatively old age. 137 00:11:06,000 --> 00:11:08,000 [birds chirping] 138 00:11:09,800 --> 00:11:11,800 [music continues] 139 00:11:12,400 --> 00:11:15,760 [Stewart] The implication of the new find was profound. 140 00:11:19,600 --> 00:11:20,520 [music fading] 141 00:11:20,520 --> 00:11:24,000 [Emma] The discovery of Shanidar 1 was potentially a huge shift 142 00:11:24,000 --> 00:11:25,840 because it did suggest that, perhaps, 143 00:11:25,840 --> 00:11:30,200 there was this element of caring and compassion in Neanderthal society. 144 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:36,480 [Stewart] Here was evidence of a severely injured individual 145 00:11:36,480 --> 00:11:39,320 being supported by their clan. 146 00:11:41,200 --> 00:11:43,200 [tense, mysterious music playing] 147 00:11:47,000 --> 00:11:50,240 [Stewart] And soon, Solecki unearthed another body 148 00:11:50,240 --> 00:11:53,600 with an equally remarkable story to tell. 149 00:12:06,080 --> 00:12:09,480 Shanidar 3 was another adult male, 150 00:12:10,400 --> 00:12:12,600 and he too, carried injuries, 151 00:12:12,600 --> 00:12:16,800 including what looked like a serious wound to his ribs. 152 00:12:17,920 --> 00:12:22,080 A stark reminder of the violent side of Neolithic life. 153 00:12:35,480 --> 00:12:40,400 Remarkably, elsewhere in the cave, more relics have been found 154 00:12:40,400 --> 00:12:43,680 that offer a clue to Shanidar 3's fate. 155 00:12:44,840 --> 00:12:48,120 {\an8}These are some of the artifacts recovered from Shanidar Cave. 156 00:12:49,080 --> 00:12:53,280 So, this larger piece is what we call a "core." Now, a core is a cobble. 157 00:12:53,280 --> 00:12:56,720 Cobbles are, basically, rounded stones that could be from the river. 158 00:12:56,720 --> 00:13:00,080 Neanderthal picked this up with the intention of taking off pieces, 159 00:13:00,080 --> 00:13:04,120 either for this to become a tool itself, or for the pieces that come off, 160 00:13:04,120 --> 00:13:06,840 which we call "flakes," to be used as a tool. 161 00:13:06,840 --> 00:13:10,480 All readily available in the Zab River, which is about two miles that way. 162 00:13:20,680 --> 00:13:24,000 So, I'm attempting to make something similar to a spearhead. 163 00:13:24,960 --> 00:13:26,640 What I basically do is 164 00:13:27,880 --> 00:13:29,320 go along the edge 165 00:13:30,800 --> 00:13:33,040 and take off smaller pieces. 166 00:13:33,040 --> 00:13:35,800 By doing that, I'm essentially sharpening it. 167 00:13:39,880 --> 00:13:41,920 I've not removed that much, 168 00:13:41,920 --> 00:13:44,960 but already we can see that it is quite sharp. 169 00:13:46,440 --> 00:13:48,200 So a spear point like that, 170 00:13:48,200 --> 00:13:51,400 has only taken me about five or six minutes to produce. 171 00:13:52,440 --> 00:13:54,840 This is a very deadly weapon used in the right hands, 172 00:13:54,840 --> 00:13:57,040 and someone who understands what they're doing, 173 00:13:57,040 --> 00:13:58,440 and what they're holding. 174 00:13:59,800 --> 00:14:01,800 [music intensifies] 175 00:14:19,440 --> 00:14:21,360 [music fading] 176 00:14:21,920 --> 00:14:24,880 [Emma] One of the interesting things with Shanidar 3 177 00:14:24,880 --> 00:14:27,080 is that they had a puncture wound. 178 00:14:30,760 --> 00:14:36,080 That suggests that this stone tip to a spear, or whatever it was, 179 00:14:36,080 --> 00:14:38,560 went in some distance into the rib cage. 180 00:14:38,560 --> 00:14:42,640 It might well have punctured the lung and caused a collapsed lung. 181 00:14:47,360 --> 00:14:48,760 [music peaks up] 182 00:14:48,760 --> 00:14:50,560 [panting] 183 00:14:54,560 --> 00:14:55,920 [grunting] 184 00:14:57,120 --> 00:14:59,120 [panting] 185 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:06,400 [speaks Neanderthal] 186 00:15:09,320 --> 00:15:11,320 [panting] 187 00:15:12,560 --> 00:15:14,320 [music fades] 188 00:15:14,320 --> 00:15:17,440 [Emma] The wound to the ribs is consistent with a projectile. 189 00:15:21,520 --> 00:15:24,160 You can imagine sort of a spear being thrown. 190 00:15:27,320 --> 00:15:28,320 [grunting] 191 00:15:33,760 --> 00:15:35,640 [Emma] It could be a hunting accident. 192 00:15:37,040 --> 00:15:39,680 It could be violence between people. 193 00:15:44,280 --> 00:15:46,920 But what we can say is that they did have this wound, 194 00:15:46,920 --> 00:15:49,240 and that they had survived for some time. 195 00:15:50,480 --> 00:15:53,640 And so that might suggest that they had some support 196 00:15:53,640 --> 00:15:56,000 and help to make it through the injury. 197 00:15:56,600 --> 00:15:57,880 [Neanderthal grunting] 198 00:16:03,360 --> 00:16:08,920 [Stewart] Though severely injured, it appears both Shanidar 3 and Shanidar 1 199 00:16:08,920 --> 00:16:11,840 had been cared for by the people around them. 200 00:16:17,040 --> 00:16:20,960 This was a radical new view of Neanderthal life. 201 00:16:22,880 --> 00:16:24,200 And elsewhere, 202 00:16:24,200 --> 00:16:27,800 more evidence of their behavior had been found in a cave 203 00:16:27,800 --> 00:16:30,640 far to the northwest of Shanidar. 204 00:16:37,760 --> 00:16:39,760 [suspenseful music playing] 205 00:16:42,160 --> 00:16:45,400 [woman] Every new evidence, that you have about Neanderthals, 206 00:16:46,560 --> 00:16:49,920 is actually showing you how human they are. 207 00:16:56,200 --> 00:16:59,360 But their behavior was different from ours. 208 00:17:02,480 --> 00:17:05,760 They lived in a completely different world to our world. 209 00:17:21,880 --> 00:17:24,760 This is part of the Krapina Collection. 210 00:17:27,520 --> 00:17:31,360 They are around 130,000 years old, 211 00:17:31,360 --> 00:17:36,040 and they are the biggest collection of Neanderthals coming from a single site. 212 00:17:40,400 --> 00:17:46,360 We are estimating possibly up to around 80 individual Neanderthals. 213 00:17:47,840 --> 00:17:50,160 You don't have their whole bodies buried. 214 00:17:50,160 --> 00:17:54,880 You actually have just fragments of each of those individuals. 215 00:17:54,880 --> 00:17:56,760 So that is very unusual. 216 00:18:06,640 --> 00:18:12,040 On the Krapina bones, both cranial, so skull bones, and also postcranial, 217 00:18:12,040 --> 00:18:16,440 you see a lot of, uh, human-made cut marks. 218 00:18:23,560 --> 00:18:27,640 What this is is a tibia, and there is a possibility 219 00:18:27,640 --> 00:18:30,920 that it was broken on purpose, that it was smashed. 220 00:18:32,880 --> 00:18:38,000 You can also see cut marks here and even some other marks. 221 00:18:39,240 --> 00:18:43,920 One of the reasons you would maybe smash a long bone 222 00:18:43,920 --> 00:18:48,480 is because it's like a container of bone marrow. 223 00:18:52,120 --> 00:18:58,400 This is a fibula that has another interesting kind of marking 224 00:18:58,400 --> 00:19:00,080 on the surface of the bone. 225 00:19:01,240 --> 00:19:04,600 They were probably made when someone was scraping off 226 00:19:04,600 --> 00:19:10,040 the remaining flesh of the bone or remaining muscle tissue of the bone. 227 00:19:10,040 --> 00:19:11,160 As you would do 228 00:19:11,160 --> 00:19:16,160 when you were just like doing the same with your chicken bone at your lunch. 229 00:19:16,160 --> 00:19:18,240 [scraping] 230 00:19:28,040 --> 00:19:30,120 [Davorka] When you hear they were eating each other, 231 00:19:30,920 --> 00:19:33,040 you're immediately, like, shocked. 232 00:19:33,040 --> 00:19:36,000 [scraping continues] 233 00:19:38,160 --> 00:19:42,360 [Davorka] But it's also the question, "What kind of cannibalism?" 234 00:19:43,560 --> 00:19:45,080 What did it mean to them? 235 00:19:48,040 --> 00:19:51,400 [scraping] 236 00:20:03,160 --> 00:20:06,880 Look at this, it cuts like a real kitchen knife. 237 00:20:08,800 --> 00:20:11,120 - [Davorka] It's almost effortless. - [Ankica] Yes, so easy. 238 00:20:16,160 --> 00:20:22,120 Recreating the tools, the ways to do stuff, 239 00:20:22,120 --> 00:20:25,600 we are trying to go into the head of those people, 240 00:20:25,600 --> 00:20:29,920 and, you know, see the cognitive processes that go behind. 241 00:20:30,800 --> 00:20:34,040 [Davorka] So, what is different is that we're just getting cut marks 242 00:20:34,040 --> 00:20:36,920 close to the articulation sites. 243 00:20:36,920 --> 00:20:40,400 And what is weird in the human remains in Krapina is 244 00:20:40,400 --> 00:20:43,960 that you are getting it all along the long bones. 245 00:20:43,960 --> 00:20:47,160 So as if someone is actually scraping it continuously. 246 00:20:47,160 --> 00:20:48,080 [Ankica] Yes. 247 00:20:49,400 --> 00:20:54,240 [Davorka] I cannot imagine, like, doing this to someone I actually know. 248 00:21:00,360 --> 00:21:04,520 So, this is the famous Krapina 3 skull. 249 00:21:05,560 --> 00:21:11,440 It is the most complete cranial specimen 250 00:21:11,440 --> 00:21:16,160 in the whole collection, and it's the only one that has a face. 251 00:21:21,200 --> 00:21:24,040 This person, we believe, was a female. 252 00:21:24,040 --> 00:21:27,240 A young Neanderthal in her 20s. 253 00:21:28,960 --> 00:21:31,680 What is very interesting is that on the frontal bone, 254 00:21:31,680 --> 00:21:36,640 you have a series of something like 40 cut marks. 255 00:21:40,360 --> 00:21:43,000 There is determination 256 00:21:43,000 --> 00:21:47,800 to do 40 cut marks slowly and very close together. 257 00:21:48,960 --> 00:21:51,320 Even if they were consuming these bones, 258 00:21:51,320 --> 00:21:54,920 I don't think it was because they were starving. 259 00:21:57,640 --> 00:22:00,600 It's actually deeply complex behavior. 260 00:22:03,720 --> 00:22:05,720 [tense, mysterious music playing] 261 00:22:09,840 --> 00:22:14,560 [Davorka] Maybe by consuming the flesh of the person they knew, 262 00:22:15,440 --> 00:22:20,880 they want to get some kind of virtue, something that they admired in this person 263 00:22:20,880 --> 00:22:23,800 that they shared their lives with. 264 00:22:26,720 --> 00:22:29,400 In the ethnographic examples that we know of, 265 00:22:29,920 --> 00:22:33,640 until recently, people consumed their loved ones 266 00:22:33,640 --> 00:22:38,640 because by consuming their flesh, they're trying to take in something 267 00:22:38,640 --> 00:22:43,680 that can continue on to other generations, you know, it's some kind of legacy. 268 00:22:47,560 --> 00:22:51,040 I cannot say that this was exactly what was the driving force 269 00:22:51,040 --> 00:22:53,840 behind this kind of behavior in Neanderthals, 270 00:22:53,840 --> 00:22:55,520 but it's another possibility. 271 00:23:01,760 --> 00:23:04,480 [Stewart] The way Neanderthals treated their dead 272 00:23:04,480 --> 00:23:07,560 shows us the complexity of their thinking. 273 00:23:13,080 --> 00:23:15,560 And nowhere is this better understood 274 00:23:15,560 --> 00:23:19,000 than in Ralph Solecki's most famous discovery, 275 00:23:19,960 --> 00:23:25,800 Shanidar 4, or what became known as "The Flower Burial." 276 00:23:30,160 --> 00:23:31,960 [Ralph Solecki] Now in this cave, 277 00:23:33,480 --> 00:23:36,960 we have found nine Neanderthals, 278 00:23:36,960 --> 00:23:39,680 of which two are most important. 279 00:23:39,680 --> 00:23:44,120 {\an8}Number 1 found over there, at the depth of about five meters, 280 00:23:44,120 --> 00:23:49,760 {\an8}and one here, Shanidar 4, found at a depth of about seven meters. 281 00:23:50,840 --> 00:23:54,440 {\an8}Ralph Solecki was one of the world's great archaeologists. 282 00:23:54,440 --> 00:23:57,200 {\an8}There's no doubt at all, and he was a great storyteller. 283 00:23:57,200 --> 00:24:03,840 This seems to indicate, perhaps, the first signs of spiritual evolution 284 00:24:04,360 --> 00:24:07,280 and maybe the first stirrings of religion. 285 00:24:07,280 --> 00:24:09,360 [tense music playing] 286 00:24:17,880 --> 00:24:22,720 {\an8}[Chris Hunt] The flower burial was one of these seminal moments, 287 00:24:22,720 --> 00:24:25,800 {\an8}because it was pretty well a complete Neanderthal, 288 00:24:25,800 --> 00:24:28,360 {\an8}which was an incredible rarity. 289 00:24:30,280 --> 00:24:33,520 And it was sampled for pollen, 290 00:24:33,520 --> 00:24:36,800 which at the time, was quite a radical thing to do. 291 00:24:36,800 --> 00:24:41,000 We had found pollen extracted from the soil, 292 00:24:41,000 --> 00:24:42,560 something like this, 293 00:24:43,200 --> 00:24:47,400 and this pollen indicates the eight types of flowers, 294 00:24:47,400 --> 00:24:50,560 which we think were interred with the individual. 295 00:24:54,240 --> 00:24:55,960 [Chris] He doesn't quite go as far as saying, 296 00:24:55,960 --> 00:24:57,600 "They conducted a funeral service," 297 00:24:57,600 --> 00:25:00,840 but that's sort of the way that the prose takes you. 298 00:25:02,760 --> 00:25:05,440 {\an8}[John Solecki] "Someone in the last ice age 299 00:25:05,440 --> 00:25:06,920 {\an8}had ranged the mountains 300 00:25:06,920 --> 00:25:09,840 {\an8}in the mournful task of collecting flowers." 301 00:25:11,080 --> 00:25:13,080 [sad music playing] 302 00:25:14,400 --> 00:25:17,240 [Chris] The public perception of the Neanderthals 303 00:25:17,240 --> 00:25:19,480 always was that they lived ugly lives. 304 00:25:19,480 --> 00:25:22,920 They were ugly people. They had no finer feelings. 305 00:25:22,920 --> 00:25:24,840 They had no higher thought. 306 00:25:29,160 --> 00:25:32,680 And here were sensitive caring individuals. 307 00:25:36,920 --> 00:25:38,880 And it made every front page, 308 00:25:40,160 --> 00:25:43,760 because here you have weeping Neanderthals gathering plants, 309 00:25:43,760 --> 00:25:47,640 from the hillside around, to honor their dead. 310 00:25:58,920 --> 00:26:01,360 [John Solecki] Here were the first "Flower People," 311 00:26:01,960 --> 00:26:05,880 a discovery wholly unprecedented in archaeology. 312 00:26:10,280 --> 00:26:12,280 [sad music continues] 313 00:26:27,360 --> 00:26:28,720 [music fades] 314 00:26:31,480 --> 00:26:33,480 [birds chirping] 315 00:26:35,000 --> 00:26:36,560 [tense music playing] 316 00:26:44,600 --> 00:26:48,280 [Stewart] In the years since the discovery of Shanidar 4, 317 00:26:49,400 --> 00:26:53,040 the Flower Burial theory has come under fire. 318 00:27:01,120 --> 00:27:03,240 Somebody who's studying jirds, 319 00:27:03,240 --> 00:27:07,440 which are little burrowing mammals, a little bit like a hamster with a tail, 320 00:27:08,120 --> 00:27:12,720 found that the jirds took flowers into their burrows to eat them. 321 00:27:16,120 --> 00:27:18,840 So, that was quite a body blow in many ways, 322 00:27:18,840 --> 00:27:23,840 particularly because Solecki had noticed what appeared to be animal burrows. 323 00:27:27,800 --> 00:27:30,560 [Stewart] But the team have new evidence that suggests 324 00:27:30,560 --> 00:27:33,720 Solecki was partly right after all. 325 00:27:35,040 --> 00:27:38,120 [Chris] This is a landscape which has things like hyenas and wolves in it, 326 00:27:38,120 --> 00:27:40,840 and leopards, even today. 327 00:27:40,840 --> 00:27:42,680 If they just left a body, 328 00:27:42,680 --> 00:27:46,040 almost certainly, something would have come along and eaten it. 329 00:27:50,560 --> 00:27:52,560 [tense music continues] 330 00:28:00,280 --> 00:28:03,480 [Chris] These are basically whole individuals 331 00:28:03,480 --> 00:28:05,400 that haven't had that done to them. 332 00:28:07,880 --> 00:28:10,720 In some way, these bodies were protected. 333 00:28:16,640 --> 00:28:22,840 My guesstimate is that, probably, they were taking branches 334 00:28:24,240 --> 00:28:29,520 and producing a fairly unpleasant barrier for wild animals. 335 00:28:32,320 --> 00:28:39,240 And bits of that vegetation and pollen fell into the corpse's rib cage 336 00:28:39,240 --> 00:28:40,840 as it became a skeleton. 337 00:28:44,360 --> 00:28:49,040 The Solecki story, I think, is a wonderful story. 338 00:28:51,960 --> 00:28:55,560 I think there's enough detail now in our understanding 339 00:28:55,560 --> 00:28:58,080 to know that it isn't a correct story, 340 00:28:59,240 --> 00:29:00,440 by any means. 341 00:29:08,600 --> 00:29:15,120 But I think the idea of Neanderthals caring for their dead, 342 00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:17,560 of perhaps protecting them... 343 00:29:21,520 --> 00:29:24,200 actually, that isn't that far, 344 00:29:24,960 --> 00:29:28,400 in some ways, from what he said. 345 00:29:33,520 --> 00:29:38,680 [Stewart] Ralph Solecki made his Flower Burial discovery in 1960. 346 00:29:40,560 --> 00:29:42,920 He planned to return the following year, 347 00:29:43,640 --> 00:29:47,360 but he would never excavate at Shanidar again. 348 00:29:48,680 --> 00:29:50,680 [music turns eerie] 349 00:29:52,800 --> 00:29:53,720 [shooting] 350 00:29:56,040 --> 00:29:58,960 [male reporter 1] The Kurds are undisputed masters of the mountains, 351 00:29:58,960 --> 00:30:01,520 where the Iraqi tanks can't reach them. 352 00:30:02,160 --> 00:30:04,040 {\an8}[dramatic music playing] 353 00:30:04,040 --> 00:30:07,680 {\an8}[male reporter 2] This is not the United States against Iraq. 354 00:30:08,360 --> 00:30:09,800 {\an8}[male soldier] Boom! There's a hit. 355 00:30:09,800 --> 00:30:11,960 {\an8}[male reporter 2] It's Iraq against the world. 356 00:30:19,520 --> 00:30:22,320 [male reporter 3] This is what regime change looks like. 357 00:30:22,320 --> 00:30:23,720 [crowd clamoring] 358 00:30:25,240 --> 00:30:26,760 [male reporter 4] Saddam has gone. 359 00:30:28,840 --> 00:30:30,680 {\an8}[male reporter 5] Pummeled by modern weaponry, 360 00:30:30,680 --> 00:30:34,640 the cruel caliphate is now surrounded by these troops. 361 00:30:40,160 --> 00:30:41,920 [Emma] In the early 2010s, 362 00:30:41,920 --> 00:30:46,000 because the situation had substantially settled down... 363 00:30:46,000 --> 00:30:49,400 [male reporter 6] The Islamic State is meeting its end. 364 00:30:49,400 --> 00:30:53,480 [Emma] ...the Kurdish regional government approached Professor Graeme Barker 365 00:30:53,480 --> 00:30:56,920 to start new excavations at Shanidar Cave. 366 00:30:59,040 --> 00:31:01,760 We weren't expecting to find any Neanderthal remains, 367 00:31:01,760 --> 00:31:05,960 and that wasn't the aim of the project, it was to, kind of, enhance the work 368 00:31:05,960 --> 00:31:07,360 that Solecki had done. 369 00:31:09,800 --> 00:31:12,600 [Stewart] So, it came as a huge surprise 370 00:31:12,600 --> 00:31:18,200 when, in 2018, the team discovered the first Neanderthal skeleton 371 00:31:18,200 --> 00:31:22,000 found anywhere for over a quarter of a century. 372 00:31:24,920 --> 00:31:27,760 [Emma] The first thing that really came up was part of the skull, 373 00:31:27,760 --> 00:31:32,000 which was incredibly exciting. It was actually part of the eye socket. 374 00:31:34,800 --> 00:31:39,240 And it has very clear Neanderthal characteristics, 375 00:31:39,240 --> 00:31:42,200 in that the brow ridge in Neanderthals are much heavier. 376 00:31:45,800 --> 00:31:48,640 And directly under that, was the left arm, 377 00:31:49,960 --> 00:31:52,840 and the left arm was kind of folded underneath, 378 00:31:52,840 --> 00:31:56,200 sort of across the body, and tucked under the head. 379 00:31:59,120 --> 00:32:01,240 [Stewart] Modern dating placed it 380 00:32:01,240 --> 00:32:04,440 amongst the oldest of Solecki's discoveries. 381 00:32:04,960 --> 00:32:06,960 [mysterious music playing] 382 00:32:10,080 --> 00:32:16,040 {\an8}[Emma] I think we find 75,000 years ago quite hard to conceptualize. 383 00:32:17,120 --> 00:32:19,480 If you think about what we know about written history 384 00:32:19,480 --> 00:32:20,880 can seem like a long time, 385 00:32:20,880 --> 00:32:24,640 and that's a drop in the ocean in terms of the history of our species. 386 00:32:25,640 --> 00:32:27,640 [music intensifies] 387 00:32:34,040 --> 00:32:38,120 When you think what's gone on in the world in that time period, 388 00:32:38,120 --> 00:32:40,200 Neanderthals have disappeared, 389 00:32:40,200 --> 00:32:43,080 modern humans have colonized the globe for good or ill. 390 00:32:43,080 --> 00:32:44,480 [chuckles] 391 00:32:44,480 --> 00:32:48,400 [Graeme] Agriculture, cities, urbanism. European colonialism. 392 00:32:49,800 --> 00:32:50,680 [exclaims] 393 00:32:50,680 --> 00:32:53,200 [Graeme] The awfulness of the 20th century. 394 00:32:53,200 --> 00:32:54,480 [crowd clamoring] 395 00:32:55,840 --> 00:32:59,080 [dramatic music intensifies, fades] 396 00:33:02,000 --> 00:33:05,080 [muffled explosion] 397 00:33:12,680 --> 00:33:14,560 [Graeme] Throughout all these events, 398 00:33:16,680 --> 00:33:18,000 there he has sat... 399 00:33:18,760 --> 00:33:20,760 [sad, mysterious music playing] 400 00:33:23,240 --> 00:33:26,120 ...or she, as flat as a pancake, 401 00:33:30,560 --> 00:33:32,480 under a great mass of rocks. 402 00:33:34,520 --> 00:33:38,200 And we come along, against all odds, and find it. 403 00:33:45,080 --> 00:33:47,080 {\an8}[music continues] 404 00:33:50,720 --> 00:33:53,080 [Graeme] It's certainly a generational find. 405 00:33:53,080 --> 00:33:54,640 Completely out of the blue. 406 00:33:59,200 --> 00:34:00,560 [music fades] 407 00:34:00,560 --> 00:34:02,760 The skull itself was very heavily crushed. 408 00:34:02,760 --> 00:34:05,880 So, actually, the entire skull was crushed flat 409 00:34:05,880 --> 00:34:08,200 and was probably two, three centimeters thick. 410 00:34:12,880 --> 00:34:14,320 Very fragmented. 411 00:34:15,920 --> 00:34:17,160 And very delicate. 412 00:34:21,400 --> 00:34:27,080 Even a brush stroke can make things crumble and almost disappear. 413 00:34:27,080 --> 00:34:29,520 So you have to proceed so carefully. 414 00:34:29,520 --> 00:34:30,960 [man] What is that piece? 415 00:34:30,960 --> 00:34:33,280 [Emma] That's the front of the mandible, 416 00:34:34,040 --> 00:34:37,920 and most of the lower teeth, but not quite all of them. 417 00:34:37,920 --> 00:34:41,200 We removed it in small sections with all of the sediment 418 00:34:41,200 --> 00:34:42,760 to help keep it together. 419 00:34:45,200 --> 00:34:48,240 It is very painstaking, and that's for good reason. 420 00:34:48,240 --> 00:34:49,680 You get one go. 421 00:34:50,400 --> 00:34:53,240 Archaeology is, by its very nature, destructive. 422 00:34:53,880 --> 00:34:55,440 Once you've excavated it, 423 00:34:56,200 --> 00:34:57,560 you can't do it again. 424 00:35:02,920 --> 00:35:06,480 Those little packages were then all brought back to the UK, 425 00:35:07,240 --> 00:35:09,400 so that we can put them back together. 426 00:35:09,400 --> 00:35:11,480 [church bells in distance] 427 00:35:24,480 --> 00:35:26,120 [tense music playing] 428 00:35:26,680 --> 00:35:29,240 [Emma] We have a small team, but it's a great team. 429 00:35:29,760 --> 00:35:31,520 People come from all over the world. 430 00:35:35,120 --> 00:35:37,560 [woman] After cleaning and strengthening the bones, 431 00:35:37,560 --> 00:35:39,280 then I had the pieces, 432 00:35:39,280 --> 00:35:43,800 and I could start to do the restoration, which is a big jigsaw. 433 00:35:48,560 --> 00:35:51,760 So, the first fragment is like the easy part. 434 00:35:54,040 --> 00:35:56,240 And then it gets more complicated. 435 00:36:01,200 --> 00:36:02,720 You need patience, 436 00:36:05,680 --> 00:36:09,760 because you have a very unique specimen in your hands. 437 00:36:12,160 --> 00:36:14,360 It's a lot of responsibility. 438 00:36:16,160 --> 00:36:18,200 [Stewart] If the skull can be reassembled, 439 00:36:18,960 --> 00:36:22,960 then the team hope to reconstruct the face of Shanidar Z. 440 00:36:25,480 --> 00:36:29,440 And another part of the skull contains yet more clues. 441 00:36:31,720 --> 00:36:34,040 [woman] Today I've been collecting the dental calculus 442 00:36:34,040 --> 00:36:37,640 that has formed on the teeth of the Shanidar Z individual. 443 00:36:45,840 --> 00:36:49,760 Dental calculus is an incrustation on your teeth. 444 00:36:49,760 --> 00:36:52,960 {\an8}It's what your dentist goes to remove once a year. 445 00:36:55,360 --> 00:36:57,760 It forms naturally in your mouth, 446 00:36:57,760 --> 00:37:02,000 and as it forms, it traps everything that ends up in your mouth. 447 00:37:03,240 --> 00:37:06,880 So, we're able to get a lot of information out of this material. 448 00:37:10,440 --> 00:37:14,040 [mysterious, evocative music playing] 449 00:37:31,560 --> 00:37:34,560 [Amanda] There is sort of this persistent narrative 450 00:37:34,560 --> 00:37:38,880 that Neanderthals were high-level hunters, 451 00:37:38,880 --> 00:37:41,840 who ate meat, meat, with meat on the side. 452 00:37:42,720 --> 00:37:44,720 [wildlife noises] 453 00:37:48,360 --> 00:37:54,200 [Amanda] It's only been in the last 10 to 20 years that we've come to recognize 454 00:37:54,200 --> 00:37:57,960 that Neanderthals did actually also consume plants. 455 00:38:10,400 --> 00:38:13,320 Knowing how to turn something that is poisonous when raw 456 00:38:13,320 --> 00:38:16,640 into something that is nutritious and edible, 457 00:38:17,600 --> 00:38:20,520 it is something that you have to learn over a lifetime. 458 00:38:24,520 --> 00:38:30,800 And if we take modern foragers as our example, 459 00:38:30,800 --> 00:38:33,480 then the people who specialized in gathering knowledge 460 00:38:33,480 --> 00:38:34,840 were probably women. 461 00:38:42,440 --> 00:38:47,200 By reconstructing what kinds of plants Neanderthals ate, 462 00:38:51,720 --> 00:38:57,360 we might be getting a window into the role of women in their society. 463 00:39:03,560 --> 00:39:06,600 We'll never know their whole story, we'll never know their name, 464 00:39:07,120 --> 00:39:08,600 their hopes and dreams. 465 00:39:11,880 --> 00:39:15,080 But it's fascinating to be involved in a project 466 00:39:15,080 --> 00:39:20,000 where you're bringing even just a tiny sliver of their life visible again. 467 00:39:28,480 --> 00:39:31,120 And you do wonder, "Who is this person?" 468 00:39:31,120 --> 00:39:34,040 "What were they like? What's their life story?" 469 00:39:34,040 --> 00:39:36,000 "How did they come to be here?" 470 00:39:40,080 --> 00:39:42,840 I find it very hard to translate 471 00:39:42,840 --> 00:39:46,960 from what a skull looks like to what that person would have looked like. 472 00:39:49,240 --> 00:39:51,240 That's where the remarkable skills 473 00:39:51,240 --> 00:39:53,520 of people like the Kennis brothers come in. 474 00:39:54,600 --> 00:39:56,560 [amusing music playing] 475 00:40:04,800 --> 00:40:08,040 Here we have the skull that Emma, the data Emma, sent us. 476 00:40:08,040 --> 00:40:11,840 We've got an almost complete skull, nice complete skull, and it's printed out. 477 00:40:11,840 --> 00:40:14,080 - So now we can see him. - Wow. 478 00:40:14,080 --> 00:40:16,560 {\an8}Who are the Kennis brothers? 479 00:40:16,560 --> 00:40:20,960 {\an8}The Kennis brothers are two twins who are fascinated by human evolution. 480 00:40:20,960 --> 00:40:22,520 Let's see, look at this nose. 481 00:40:22,520 --> 00:40:25,720 It looks a very Neanderthal-like nose, but what we see is 482 00:40:25,720 --> 00:40:28,480 that the other side of the nose is very narrow. 483 00:40:28,480 --> 00:40:31,080 [Adrie] We reconstruct ancient extinct humans. 484 00:40:31,080 --> 00:40:32,960 We try to show people 485 00:40:32,960 --> 00:40:37,400 how maybe the early ancestors would look like in real life. 486 00:40:37,400 --> 00:40:40,480 - Big eyes, tall face, small nose. - Big eye, yeah. 487 00:40:40,480 --> 00:40:46,160 You know, like... spectacles, you know, these enormous, big spectacles like... 488 00:40:46,160 --> 00:40:50,080 If you put the mandible below it, it looks like... uh... 489 00:40:50,080 --> 00:40:52,000 [Adrie] We were very bad at school. 490 00:40:52,000 --> 00:40:53,640 We didn't read much. 491 00:40:53,640 --> 00:40:57,360 We went to the library, and we saw some beautiful pictures of Neanderthals. 492 00:40:59,240 --> 00:41:01,760 We see immediately those worn-down teeth, mamma mia! 493 00:41:01,760 --> 00:41:04,040 - [Alfons] Incredible teeth. - [Adrie] Typical Neanderthal. 494 00:41:04,040 --> 00:41:07,600 - They use their teeth like a vice. Yeah. - [Alfons] Vice. Like a tool. 495 00:41:07,600 --> 00:41:09,040 [Adrie] That, we find fascinating. 496 00:41:09,040 --> 00:41:13,560 How a face, an ape face, could morph into a human face. 497 00:41:14,800 --> 00:41:16,800 [gentle uplifting music playing] 498 00:41:21,120 --> 00:41:23,560 [Adrie] For us, what's fascinating about Neanderthals is, 499 00:41:23,560 --> 00:41:26,080 they've got an enormous, big nose, 500 00:41:27,200 --> 00:41:28,760 an enormous puffy face. 501 00:41:29,320 --> 00:41:34,000 Never in human evolution did you see such a big, strange face. 502 00:41:34,880 --> 00:41:36,560 So that's fantastic to see. 503 00:41:39,000 --> 00:41:40,640 [music continues] 504 00:41:45,920 --> 00:41:50,120 [Alfons] So, mostly we get skulls. Mostly the skulls are distorted. 505 00:41:51,560 --> 00:41:53,400 We're gonna correct the skulls. 506 00:41:53,400 --> 00:41:57,160 We're going to make them complete with forensic methods. 507 00:42:03,960 --> 00:42:07,920 When the skull is complete, then we apply the tissue thickness, 508 00:42:09,120 --> 00:42:11,080 the muscles on it and the flesh. 509 00:42:14,000 --> 00:42:16,840 We fill it up with a kind of skin layer. 510 00:42:20,080 --> 00:42:22,160 {\an8}I want to make them human-like, 511 00:42:22,160 --> 00:42:25,640 {\an8}not too brutish, human-like, but not too cliché. 512 00:42:42,840 --> 00:42:44,240 [Adrie] Yeah, you can come. 513 00:42:46,800 --> 00:42:49,240 [Alfons] I hope that a lot of people look at this face 514 00:42:49,240 --> 00:42:52,000 and maybe look at how strange it is. 515 00:42:53,520 --> 00:42:56,240 They had such peculiar features. 516 00:42:57,640 --> 00:43:01,120 And that's so striking because the brain size is same as us. 517 00:43:01,120 --> 00:43:04,360 They are as human as us, but still there are differences, 518 00:43:04,360 --> 00:43:06,840 and that's fascinating, why are they different? 519 00:43:09,120 --> 00:43:12,000 It's such a kind of parallel evolution with us. 520 00:43:13,520 --> 00:43:15,520 - [Alfons] All right. - [Adrie] Yeah, all right. Okay. 521 00:43:15,520 --> 00:43:18,880 [Alfons] And why did one disappear, and why is one still alive? 522 00:43:18,880 --> 00:43:22,000 That's fascinating. That's the other us. 523 00:43:22,000 --> 00:43:24,080 [mysterious music playing] 524 00:43:29,280 --> 00:43:32,360 [Stewart] Historically, these "other us" 525 00:43:32,360 --> 00:43:36,040 were thought to be not as smart as our own species. 526 00:43:42,040 --> 00:43:48,680 Only Homo Sapiens are capable of imagination, creativity, invention. 527 00:44:00,800 --> 00:44:03,000 But this prejudice has been shattered 528 00:44:03,000 --> 00:44:09,360 by what was found inside a secret and truly extraordinary French cave. 529 00:44:15,040 --> 00:44:16,640 [adventurous music playing] 530 00:44:22,560 --> 00:44:26,840 [woman] First, we go into this very narrow space. 531 00:44:29,600 --> 00:44:33,200 You have to be really careful how you enter in it. 532 00:44:33,200 --> 00:44:35,560 Push your bag in front of you. 533 00:44:46,200 --> 00:44:48,200 [music peaks, fades] 534 00:44:56,400 --> 00:44:58,400 There you enter another world. 535 00:45:05,720 --> 00:45:07,640 [ethereal music playing] 536 00:45:14,440 --> 00:45:17,800 [man in French] It is really unnatural to go into the caves. 537 00:45:23,440 --> 00:45:26,880 These are places that people fear. 538 00:45:35,360 --> 00:45:37,600 And especially to the very bottom of the caves. 539 00:45:48,720 --> 00:45:50,320 [music fades] 540 00:45:50,880 --> 00:45:54,120 {\an8}The cave has been there for a very long time. 541 00:45:55,320 --> 00:45:57,280 A million years, probably. 542 00:45:58,080 --> 00:46:01,520 So that's also something that you feel when you enter there. 543 00:46:02,040 --> 00:46:06,240 A kind of environment that knew already a very long history. 544 00:46:10,400 --> 00:46:14,880 When you go a bit further, you have these nice very calm lakes. 545 00:46:20,120 --> 00:46:22,360 The cave is shaped by water 546 00:46:23,120 --> 00:46:28,480 dripping in and forming these very nice stalagmites, stalactites. 547 00:46:34,080 --> 00:46:36,240 What's really interesting... 548 00:46:37,640 --> 00:46:40,560 you see that there is really a kind of pattern. 549 00:46:41,800 --> 00:46:43,840 These are forming circles. 550 00:46:55,000 --> 00:46:58,160 This is not something you would see in a natural cave. 551 00:47:06,880 --> 00:47:08,800 [man in French] It's very constructed. 552 00:47:11,800 --> 00:47:15,920 {\an8}We understood that there were architectural tricks. 553 00:47:24,080 --> 00:47:28,640 Small elements to wedge the large stalagmites. 554 00:47:31,960 --> 00:47:35,840 All of this is completely structured and thought out. 555 00:47:46,480 --> 00:47:52,040 For an archaeologist, it's quite unique. There is no other equivalent to it. 556 00:48:01,960 --> 00:48:04,720 [Sophie in English] In the biggest circular structure there, 557 00:48:04,720 --> 00:48:09,160 we have really a very nice hearth made by stalagmites. 558 00:48:12,200 --> 00:48:15,520 [in French] Here we have a thermal alteration, but it's not the only one. 559 00:48:15,520 --> 00:48:17,680 We have quite a few... 560 00:48:17,680 --> 00:48:20,280 - Here we agree, that's the hearth. - It's the hearth. 561 00:48:20,280 --> 00:48:21,680 [Sophie] It's the hearth. 562 00:48:24,720 --> 00:48:30,760 So we have several places here where a fire was present at some point. 563 00:48:33,240 --> 00:48:34,240 Number 38, 564 00:48:34,240 --> 00:48:37,720 along the middle. 565 00:48:37,720 --> 00:48:40,560 [Sophie in English] It's a bit like what we'd do when we camp, 566 00:48:40,560 --> 00:48:46,000 and we would take wood and make a hearth, like, in a teepee form, 567 00:48:46,000 --> 00:48:47,920 like a point form. 568 00:48:47,920 --> 00:48:51,280 [in French] This is very exciting because we can see traces of soot, 569 00:48:51,280 --> 00:48:53,440 thermal alterations. 570 00:48:53,440 --> 00:48:57,000 There is very black soot, it's red, it's purple. 571 00:49:03,480 --> 00:49:07,760 Obviously, in all traditional or prehistoric populations, 572 00:49:07,760 --> 00:49:10,200 we know that fire has a symbolic value. 573 00:49:12,840 --> 00:49:14,840 [mysterious music playing] 574 00:49:32,480 --> 00:49:38,360 [Sophie in English] We find on the ground very small pieces of burnt wood. 575 00:49:41,040 --> 00:49:44,760 So probably, they come in the cave with torches. 576 00:49:50,280 --> 00:49:53,400 If you are in the middle of the cave without light, 577 00:49:53,400 --> 00:49:54,840 it's really dangerous. 578 00:49:56,440 --> 00:49:58,840 So, you need to communicate very well. 579 00:50:10,920 --> 00:50:13,840 You need to master very well the fire, 580 00:50:18,480 --> 00:50:19,520 the lighting. 581 00:50:26,960 --> 00:50:30,760 So, the first idea was to date these structures. 582 00:50:43,280 --> 00:50:46,080 So, these are the cores of the Bruniquel Cave, 583 00:50:46,080 --> 00:50:51,200 and these cores tell us really the age of these structures. 584 00:50:54,680 --> 00:50:57,160 By studying six different cores, 585 00:50:57,160 --> 00:51:02,600 we could come to a very precise age of 176,500 years, 586 00:51:03,200 --> 00:51:06,640 and this was really incredible, in fact. 587 00:51:12,000 --> 00:51:14,600 [in French] One hundred seventy-five thousand years ago in Europe, 588 00:51:14,600 --> 00:51:16,360 there were only Neanderthals. 589 00:51:18,080 --> 00:51:22,520 Bruniquel is the oldest construction in the world that you can see. 590 00:51:31,440 --> 00:51:34,360 [Sophie in English] It's very emotional when you see these structures, 591 00:51:34,360 --> 00:51:38,040 and, especially, when you know that they are so old. 592 00:51:51,160 --> 00:51:55,120 [Jacques in French] The recurring question that keeps coming back is, 593 00:51:55,120 --> 00:51:56,600 "What are the structures for?" 594 00:52:20,400 --> 00:52:23,720 [Sophie in English] The circle seems to be the world. 595 00:52:23,720 --> 00:52:28,000 So, you are inside the world, outside the world, these kind of concepts. 596 00:52:30,640 --> 00:52:35,080 With Native Americans, where you have these circles, 597 00:52:35,080 --> 00:52:38,840 people are in connection with higher spirits. 598 00:52:49,680 --> 00:52:51,920 Is it the start of the religion? 599 00:53:01,360 --> 00:53:05,720 This is a crucial question, but which is really difficult to answer. 600 00:53:20,240 --> 00:53:25,440 [Jacques in French] So more and more, we tend to see in Neanderthals 601 00:53:27,320 --> 00:53:30,200 a much older humanity, 602 00:53:32,600 --> 00:53:38,000 which shares with modern man more and more things in common. 603 00:53:52,360 --> 00:53:54,240 And therefore with Bruniquel, 604 00:53:55,640 --> 00:54:02,640 we increased this relationship we have with an ancestor who is very old. 605 00:54:11,880 --> 00:54:15,920 [Stewart in English] The enigmatic circles at Bruniquel are a wonderful part 606 00:54:15,920 --> 00:54:19,920 of the ongoing reappraisal of Neanderthal culture... 607 00:54:25,720 --> 00:54:28,120 that began at Shanidar, 608 00:54:28,760 --> 00:54:31,480 and which continues to this day. 609 00:54:44,800 --> 00:54:48,240 [Emma] This year, we found a few isolated bits 610 00:54:48,240 --> 00:54:51,160 of what we think could be a single skeleton. 611 00:54:53,200 --> 00:54:55,240 We might have found another individual. 612 00:54:57,240 --> 00:54:59,840 There's the left shoulder blades. 613 00:55:00,840 --> 00:55:03,720 There's also a reasonably complete right hand. 614 00:55:07,720 --> 00:55:10,280 What we've actually found is four fingers, 615 00:55:10,280 --> 00:55:13,080 more or less, in the place they'd be in the body. 616 00:55:13,080 --> 00:55:15,000 So, what we'd call articulated. 617 00:55:15,600 --> 00:55:19,040 [Stewart] The new remains are amongst a cluster of bodies 618 00:55:19,040 --> 00:55:23,880 that include both Shanidar 4 and Shanidar Z. 619 00:55:26,400 --> 00:55:27,720 [Emma] That's really exciting 620 00:55:27,720 --> 00:55:31,720 because what it is is evidence of Neanderthals 621 00:55:31,720 --> 00:55:35,400 placing their dead in this one particular spot. 622 00:55:39,160 --> 00:55:43,640 Are they perhaps coming back to that same spot on multiple occasions, 623 00:55:43,640 --> 00:55:47,400 which could be decades or maybe thousands of years apart? 624 00:55:48,800 --> 00:55:50,360 So you start to ask, 625 00:55:50,360 --> 00:55:56,400 "Is it just a coincidence, or is this potentially something intentional?" 626 00:55:57,640 --> 00:56:01,240 And if so, then, why? And what's bringing them back there? 627 00:56:01,240 --> 00:56:03,240 [mysterious, dramatic music playing] 628 00:56:10,000 --> 00:56:15,800 [Emma] When Shanidar Z was buried, there was a stone behind the skull. 629 00:56:18,400 --> 00:56:22,280 And that is interesting because it seems rather out of place. 630 00:56:24,760 --> 00:56:27,960 And so an idea we've been thinking about is, 631 00:56:27,960 --> 00:56:30,920 could this be something that's been put there intentionally? 632 00:56:37,880 --> 00:56:39,800 Another thing that's interesting is that, 633 00:56:39,800 --> 00:56:43,200 on the other side of the body, you've got the big vertical slab. 634 00:56:52,680 --> 00:56:56,080 Clearly, if you've got big vertical slabs sticking up out of the ground, 635 00:56:56,080 --> 00:56:59,640 there is a possibility that that could act as some kind of marker. 636 00:57:04,400 --> 00:57:07,480 So, it seems that certain individuals were buried here, 637 00:57:07,480 --> 00:57:09,920 and they're coming back for that very reason, 638 00:57:11,000 --> 00:57:14,320 and to this one spot, that's marked by this very distinctive stone, 639 00:57:14,320 --> 00:57:16,480 in what is a very distinctive cave. 640 00:57:24,760 --> 00:57:27,600 [Graeme] It looks more and more as Ralph Solecki 641 00:57:27,600 --> 00:57:32,640 first found that Shanidar Cave was a special place for Neanderthals. 642 00:57:38,880 --> 00:57:41,280 They are placing bodies. 643 00:57:41,280 --> 00:57:42,720 They're in a world, 644 00:57:42,720 --> 00:57:46,520 in which they are coming back here regularly and living here. 645 00:57:50,400 --> 00:57:53,120 [Stewart] The cluster of remains are perhaps evidence 646 00:57:53,120 --> 00:57:55,560 of a Neanderthal burial ground, 647 00:57:56,440 --> 00:57:59,560 a discovery with deep implications. 648 00:58:02,080 --> 00:58:05,000 [Emma] How people treat the dead 649 00:58:05,000 --> 00:58:11,120 can give us really important insights into thinking, imagination, emotion. 650 00:58:13,760 --> 00:58:17,880 It perhaps also reflects how we think about death itself, 651 00:58:18,840 --> 00:58:22,920 and whether, for example, we believe that there might be an afterlife. 652 00:58:26,200 --> 00:58:32,480 [Graeme] It's part of a rising sense of the complexity of Neanderthal culture. 653 00:58:34,080 --> 00:58:35,240 But they're not here now. 654 00:58:40,840 --> 00:58:45,440 [Stewart] The burials are just the latest traces of Neanderthal behavior 655 00:58:45,440 --> 00:58:48,760 preserved inside this remarkable cave. 656 00:58:54,400 --> 00:58:59,080 Yet, perhaps, the biggest mystery remains. 657 00:59:04,400 --> 00:59:10,920 Why did a form of humanity, that thrived for 300,000 years, disappear 658 00:59:12,320 --> 00:59:14,120 forty-thousand years ago? 659 00:59:20,760 --> 00:59:23,480 Perhaps the best place to search for answers 660 00:59:23,480 --> 00:59:26,720 lies on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea 661 00:59:26,720 --> 00:59:30,520 at one of the final strongholds of the Neanderthals. 662 00:59:38,240 --> 00:59:40,760 [man] Well, we're sitting on the edge of a cliff. 663 00:59:42,720 --> 00:59:45,400 {\an8}Very close to, what a friend called, Neanderthal City... 664 00:59:47,640 --> 00:59:50,920 because it's a whole row of caves on the waterfront, 665 00:59:50,920 --> 00:59:52,920 on the east side of the Rock of Gibraltar. 666 00:59:58,040 --> 01:00:01,200 The Gorham's Cave complex is a series of caves, 667 01:00:01,840 --> 01:00:04,600 and all these caves show very clear evidence 668 01:00:04,600 --> 01:00:08,600 of Neanderthal presence and occupation over a long period of time. 669 01:00:18,600 --> 01:00:23,160 We have evidence going back to at least 125,000 years ago. 670 01:00:28,760 --> 01:00:30,840 [Stewart] The team have unearthed evidence 671 01:00:30,840 --> 01:00:36,680 that Neanderthals were using the caves as recently as 40,000 years ago. 672 01:00:43,200 --> 01:00:46,200 [Clive] Over the last 100,000 years of their existence, 673 01:00:46,200 --> 01:00:49,440 the world of the Neanderthals was constantly changing. 674 01:00:52,000 --> 01:00:54,000 [thunder rumbling] 675 01:01:07,040 --> 01:01:09,200 [Clive] The climatic changes were brutal. 676 01:01:09,200 --> 01:01:11,400 They had been earlier ice ages, 677 01:01:11,400 --> 01:01:15,120 but the last one, arguably, was the worst one in terms of impact. 678 01:01:15,120 --> 01:01:17,760 The Scandinavian ice sheet really spread south. 679 01:01:18,880 --> 01:01:22,120 France and Central Europe were little more than steppe-tundra. 680 01:01:23,280 --> 01:01:25,240 It really was a very harsh world. 681 01:01:28,520 --> 01:01:30,840 The tundra didn't reach this far south, 682 01:01:31,680 --> 01:01:33,880 but there were still obvious changes. 683 01:01:34,400 --> 01:01:38,360 When conditions get very cold, a lot of water is trapped as ice, 684 01:01:38,360 --> 01:01:41,440 in ice sheets, in glaciers, and the sea level drops. 685 01:01:45,200 --> 01:01:47,680 [woman] When the sea level was lower than it is today, 686 01:01:47,680 --> 01:01:50,160 that would have exposed a large plain 687 01:01:50,160 --> 01:01:53,200 where all these herbivores would have been living, 688 01:01:53,200 --> 01:01:55,080 where the birds would have been living, 689 01:01:55,080 --> 01:01:58,240 where there would have been shallow lakes with fresh water. 690 01:02:01,480 --> 01:02:05,280 They would have known exactly which species they could consume, 691 01:02:05,280 --> 01:02:09,240 where to find them, and how to best use them. 692 01:02:11,520 --> 01:02:14,200 These are just a very small sample of all the bones, 693 01:02:14,200 --> 01:02:16,720 and all the remains that we've found in the caves. 694 01:02:16,720 --> 01:02:21,840 We've got tens of thousands of artifacts that we found in the last 30 years. 695 01:02:24,160 --> 01:02:26,720 They're eating animals that are not expected, 696 01:02:26,720 --> 01:02:29,320 {\an8}and not normally associated, with Neanderthals. 697 01:02:31,880 --> 01:02:35,880 We have evidence that they were going down to the rocky shoreline 698 01:02:35,880 --> 01:02:37,280 and picking limpets. 699 01:02:37,280 --> 01:02:39,640 And, in fact, I've got a limpet here, 700 01:02:39,640 --> 01:02:44,120 which has still got a flint tool stuck on to it. 701 01:02:44,120 --> 01:02:46,920 So, it's where the Neanderthal left it. 702 01:02:49,440 --> 01:02:54,040 But then we get this particular bone, which comes from a common dolphin, 703 01:02:55,200 --> 01:02:57,000 and it's got cut marks on it. 704 01:02:58,760 --> 01:03:03,280 Maybe the dolphin was dead already on the shore, but they defleshed it. 705 01:03:03,920 --> 01:03:05,840 They removed the flesh to consume it. 706 01:03:10,720 --> 01:03:15,160 The Neanderthals thrived in Europe for longer than we have been around. 707 01:03:15,160 --> 01:03:16,200 That's for sure. 708 01:03:23,960 --> 01:03:26,760 To me, that says that they're intelligent, 709 01:03:26,760 --> 01:03:29,080 and that they understand their environment. 710 01:03:31,840 --> 01:03:32,760 [stabs] 711 01:03:34,240 --> 01:03:36,920 In that sense, they were extremely successful. 712 01:03:42,840 --> 01:03:46,720 [Clive] The Neanderthals were human. They were resilient. 713 01:03:46,720 --> 01:03:48,520 They were very much like us. 714 01:03:49,160 --> 01:03:51,720 But, one day, it all came to an end. 715 01:03:55,120 --> 01:03:58,040 [Stewart] Which deepens the mystery of their disappearance. 716 01:03:58,880 --> 01:04:04,360 After all, if the Gibraltar Neanderthals were so resilient for so long, 717 01:04:05,200 --> 01:04:06,800 what on earth went wrong? 718 01:04:07,680 --> 01:04:11,960 [Clive] People associate the Ice Age with getting cold, which of course it did, 719 01:04:11,960 --> 01:04:13,880 but it also got dryer. 720 01:04:15,520 --> 01:04:18,880 The change that hit these Neanderthals in Gibraltar, 721 01:04:18,880 --> 01:04:24,720 in my view, was one of a world of trees disappearing. 722 01:04:30,040 --> 01:04:32,200 You have trees, and why are those significant? 723 01:04:32,200 --> 01:04:36,280 Because they allow you to ambush hunt large prey. 724 01:04:41,320 --> 01:04:44,280 Through time, their whole physique 725 01:04:44,280 --> 01:04:48,360 had become that of a wrestler-type build, if you like, 726 01:04:48,360 --> 01:04:51,680 capable of jumping on top of these animals with spears, 727 01:04:51,680 --> 01:04:54,320 thrusting spears and killing those animals. 728 01:04:58,760 --> 01:05:02,040 Suddenly, that world becomes an open landscape. 729 01:05:02,040 --> 01:05:05,600 The animals see you coming a mile away. You can't get near them. 730 01:05:10,160 --> 01:05:11,720 When the change came, 731 01:05:11,720 --> 01:05:15,240 it was so rapid that their biology couldn't change at that speed. 732 01:05:29,680 --> 01:05:31,320 And that's what hit them. 733 01:05:42,320 --> 01:05:45,760 We think that we are the pinnacle of evolution, 734 01:05:45,760 --> 01:05:48,160 that's the way we've always painted ourselves. 735 01:05:48,160 --> 01:05:51,520 Even with respect to the Neanderthals, we're here, and they're not, 736 01:05:51,520 --> 01:05:54,200 because we were better than they were. Um... 737 01:05:54,200 --> 01:06:00,840 But you can be very highly adapted, you can do very well on a planet, 738 01:06:00,840 --> 01:06:03,520 like, we'd argue, perhaps we're doing today. 739 01:06:04,280 --> 01:06:08,200 And yet, the story tells us that there are other ways of being human, 740 01:06:08,200 --> 01:06:10,960 and those ways can sometimes fail. 741 01:06:15,840 --> 01:06:18,440 We might think we're doing very well on this planet, 742 01:06:18,440 --> 01:06:19,640 but just be aware. 743 01:06:26,760 --> 01:06:32,360 [Stewart] By around 40,000 years ago, Neanderthal numbers were in free fall. 744 01:06:33,280 --> 01:06:38,560 Not just in Gibraltar, but across their entire world. 745 01:06:42,520 --> 01:06:45,800 Climate change was a factor in their decline. 746 01:06:48,560 --> 01:06:54,520 But so too, was increasing competition from another species. 747 01:06:59,480 --> 01:07:05,360 To this day, all of us carry a tiny bit of Neanderthal DNA. 748 01:07:09,320 --> 01:07:12,760 A legacy of our long-lost ancestors. 749 01:07:16,840 --> 01:07:21,280 For at least 100,000 years, waves of Homo Sapiens 750 01:07:21,280 --> 01:07:25,760 had spread from Africa into Europe and Asia, 751 01:07:29,360 --> 01:07:32,880 encountering Neanderthals as they traveled. 752 01:07:33,400 --> 01:07:35,400 [wildlife noises] 753 01:07:35,400 --> 01:07:37,640 [tense music playing] 754 01:08:03,280 --> 01:08:06,640 [Stewart] Some of these encounters may have been violent. 755 01:08:15,880 --> 01:08:17,040 [speaks Neanderthal] 756 01:08:18,680 --> 01:08:19,840 [panting] 757 01:08:31,520 --> 01:08:33,040 [music peaks, fades] 758 01:08:35,240 --> 01:08:37,600 [panting gently] 759 01:08:44,680 --> 01:08:49,680 [Stewart] But some, presumably, were more peaceful. 760 01:08:54,080 --> 01:08:59,160 One group of people recognizing the humanity of the other. 761 01:09:08,840 --> 01:09:10,960 The path of these epic journeys 762 01:09:10,960 --> 01:09:14,520 would have taken Homo Sapiens through the Middle East. 763 01:09:17,480 --> 01:09:23,880 Close to the ancestral burial ground of the Shanidar Neanderthals. 764 01:09:27,360 --> 01:09:30,280 [evocative music playing] 765 01:09:38,520 --> 01:09:42,920 [Abdulwahab in Kurdish] Neanderthal genes are present inside many Homo Sapiens. 766 01:09:46,240 --> 01:09:51,160 And I do really believe that we are cousins. 767 01:09:51,160 --> 01:09:53,920 We are of the same blood. 768 01:09:53,920 --> 01:09:56,080 We have the same ancestors. 769 01:10:04,800 --> 01:10:07,840 [Emma] One of the things that I find so fascinating about archaeology 770 01:10:07,840 --> 01:10:10,440 is that diversity of ways of being human. 771 01:10:12,600 --> 01:10:16,200 Looking at how people's skeletons are, 772 01:10:16,200 --> 01:10:20,000 can tell us about their lives and their experience of the world. 773 01:10:22,920 --> 01:10:26,160 While excavating Shanidar Z, we could see certain characteristics 774 01:10:26,160 --> 01:10:28,800 that suggested that they're an adult, 775 01:10:28,800 --> 01:10:32,160 but we didn't know how old they were when they died, 776 01:10:32,160 --> 01:10:34,440 we didn't know whether they were male or female, 777 01:10:34,440 --> 01:10:37,600 and we didn't know a great deal either about their life. 778 01:10:40,680 --> 01:10:44,720 So a lot of those kinds of questions of what we are working on answering now. 779 01:10:46,400 --> 01:10:51,200 What we've got here is the left radius. So, this is one of the forearm bones. 780 01:10:52,480 --> 01:10:56,040 We can tell already that this was a relatively small individual, 781 01:10:56,640 --> 01:11:02,400 between about one and a half, or 1.55 meter to 1.60 meter tall. 782 01:11:03,360 --> 01:11:05,920 That's just over five foot essentially. 783 01:11:08,400 --> 01:11:12,640 Here we've got part of the lower jaw, the mandible, with some of the teeth. 784 01:11:12,640 --> 01:11:15,960 An important thing to notice, is that actually many of these teeth, 785 01:11:15,960 --> 01:11:19,760 especially the front teeth here, are all extremely worn down. 786 01:11:20,760 --> 01:11:21,840 That's the enamel, 787 01:11:22,360 --> 01:11:25,760 that's completely worn off, all of these teeth. 788 01:11:27,040 --> 01:11:30,640 Certainly, we know that for a Neanderthal with teeth this worn, 789 01:11:30,640 --> 01:11:32,600 they had to be an older individual, 790 01:11:33,400 --> 01:11:36,480 probably somewhere between about 40 and 50. 791 01:11:42,280 --> 01:11:46,280 There are ways that we can tell the sex of the individual from the skeleton. 792 01:11:47,720 --> 01:11:50,880 What we did was use a technique called proteomics, 793 01:11:50,880 --> 01:11:53,440 which is where you analyze some of the proteins 794 01:11:53,440 --> 01:11:55,040 in the enamel of the tooth, 795 01:11:55,040 --> 01:11:59,400 because we know that there's a particular protein that's produced, 796 01:11:59,400 --> 01:12:01,320 while that enamel's forming, 797 01:12:01,320 --> 01:12:05,560 that has a different version that's encoded by 798 01:12:05,560 --> 01:12:08,720 what's on the X chromosome compared to what's on the Y chromosome. 799 01:12:11,200 --> 01:12:15,360 So, that indicates very strongly to us that this is a female individual. 800 01:12:21,640 --> 01:12:25,760 Quite often, we think of Neanderthals as males, 801 01:12:25,760 --> 01:12:30,560 or we tend to focus on aspects of male behavior. 802 01:12:32,800 --> 01:12:37,120 This is a really exciting opportunity to understand Neanderthal society 803 01:12:37,120 --> 01:12:38,440 more completely. 804 01:12:45,120 --> 01:12:47,840 I think to have an actual reconstruction 805 01:12:47,840 --> 01:12:52,440 of what this Neanderthal woman might have looked like 806 01:12:52,440 --> 01:12:55,280 during life will be incredibly exciting. 807 01:12:57,040 --> 01:13:00,520 - Well, Doctor Pomeroy. - Let's find out. [chuckles] 808 01:13:01,920 --> 01:13:04,240 - We have one already prepared. - Hmm. 809 01:13:04,880 --> 01:13:05,720 Yep. 810 01:13:13,440 --> 01:13:14,760 I'm gonna start from this. 811 01:13:21,720 --> 01:13:23,320 - [Emma] Oh, wow. - [Graeme] Wow. 812 01:13:26,600 --> 01:13:28,200 - Well. - [Graeme] Well. 813 01:13:28,200 --> 01:13:31,880 [chuckles] Amazing, we should turn her round, so that everyone else can see. 814 01:13:33,040 --> 01:13:34,680 Wow. [chuckles] 815 01:13:36,440 --> 01:13:37,600 She's looking at me. 816 01:13:37,600 --> 01:13:42,040 [Emma] Yeah, she is. You've probably spent the most time with her, so... [chuckles] 817 01:13:42,040 --> 01:13:44,720 - Also, you remember the nose and... - Yeah. 818 01:13:45,560 --> 01:13:47,080 - It's amazing. - [Emma] Yeah. 819 01:13:47,080 --> 01:13:49,560 It's interesting how they've done her expression, 820 01:13:49,560 --> 01:13:52,360 I mean the emotions that are wrapped into it. 821 01:13:52,360 --> 01:13:56,000 I think that's the beauty of these kinds of reconstructions, 822 01:13:56,000 --> 01:13:59,600 is that some people are somewhat critical, 823 01:13:59,600 --> 01:14:02,200 and say, "We can never know what people looked like." 824 01:14:02,200 --> 01:14:05,960 There's various assumptions we have to make, and that's very true, 825 01:14:05,960 --> 01:14:12,240 but... I think it does give you a sense of her as a person. 826 01:14:12,240 --> 01:14:13,280 [Lucía] Hmm. 827 01:14:17,840 --> 01:14:21,560 [Graeme] She gets to the heart, doesn't she, of what it means to be human. 828 01:14:21,560 --> 01:14:24,760 What it might have meant to be human Neanderthal. 829 01:14:24,760 --> 01:14:27,080 Somehow, you do get something of the... 830 01:14:27,840 --> 01:14:31,120 I don't know, of a deep life history to this person. 831 01:14:39,280 --> 01:14:44,120 {\an8}[Chris] It's the older people, with their knowledge, their experience, 832 01:14:44,960 --> 01:14:48,440 {\an8}who would have known where the good places were. 833 01:14:51,880 --> 01:14:55,080 That memory, whether it was only within her head, 834 01:14:55,080 --> 01:14:58,080 or whether it was something that was in her head, 835 01:14:58,080 --> 01:15:01,280 that she was sharing through songs and stories 836 01:15:01,280 --> 01:15:03,840 with children and grandchildren, 837 01:15:03,840 --> 01:15:06,680 would have been absolutely vital to the group. 838 01:15:08,280 --> 01:15:14,280 In many ways, that was the beginning of civilization in a much more real sense 839 01:15:14,280 --> 01:15:16,800 than the first time somebody built a building, 840 01:15:16,800 --> 01:15:18,200 or anything like that. 841 01:15:23,440 --> 01:15:27,520 [Emma] She likely had that, kind of, role of a repository of knowledge 842 01:15:27,520 --> 01:15:31,680 and had a major role in passing on that knowledge to the next generation. 843 01:15:31,680 --> 01:15:35,600 And here we are, 75,000 years later, 844 01:15:36,880 --> 01:15:39,680 learning from her, still. 845 01:15:40,840 --> 01:15:42,840 [dramatic, evocative music playing] 846 01:15:55,320 --> 01:15:59,560 [Emma] Shanidar Cave has taught us a huge amount about Neanderthals, 847 01:16:00,240 --> 01:16:02,040 and it still is teaching us. 848 01:16:07,160 --> 01:16:11,800 But also, it's made us reflect on what does it mean to be human? 849 01:16:14,560 --> 01:16:15,960 [birds chirping] 850 01:16:15,960 --> 01:16:19,320 Things like, having compassion for one another. 851 01:16:22,400 --> 01:16:24,400 How we deal with death. 852 01:16:27,280 --> 01:16:30,280 And what's inevitably going to happen to all of us. 853 01:16:35,400 --> 01:16:37,400 [music continues] 854 01:16:38,720 --> 01:16:41,280 [Emma] Right now, we're getting a snapshot, 855 01:16:41,280 --> 01:16:43,920 and it's amazing and rich, 856 01:16:43,920 --> 01:16:46,120 but we certainly don't have the whole picture, 857 01:16:46,120 --> 01:16:49,400 and there's much more there to be discovered 858 01:16:52,240 --> 01:16:56,960 about what we understand "being human" and "humanity" to be. 859 01:16:59,200 --> 01:17:00,160 [music peaks] 860 01:17:11,160 --> 01:17:13,160 [music fades] 861 01:17:19,880 --> 01:17:23,000 [gentle, ethereal music playing]