Neanderthal tooth discovered in Gibraltar's Vanguard Cave
A Neanderthal child’s upper right canine milk tooth from the Vanguard Cave was discovered during laboratory work in the Gibraltar Museum, on Monday 3rd July, by Miriam Napper of Liverpool John Moores University, and Lucia Castagna from Bologna University. They noticed a strange tooth, which they passed to Stewart Finlayson of the Gibraltar Museum who immediately recognised its importance. The Neanderthal child’s upper right canine milk tooth from the Vanguard Cave [Credit: Gibraltar Museum] Photographs of the tooth were sent immediately to leading experts in this field, particularly working on Neanderthal teeth, who confirmed that tooth belonged to a human child aged 4-5 years and showed features characteristic of Neanderthal. Its context, in a level at Vanguard Cave dated to ~50,000 years ago, confirms the identity as being Neanderthal. The level from which the tooth came is not one of occupation by Neanderthals but is, instead, a Spotted Hyaena (Crocuta crocuta) lair. It is pos...