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Neanderthals had dexterous hands that could have held tools like a pen

By Michael Marshall

26 September 2018

An adult female Neanderthal hand and arm from the left side.

Neanderthals were surprisingly dexterous

Robert Clark/National Geographic/Getty

Neanderthals could hold objects between finger and thumb, just like we would hold a pen, because their hands were more nimble than anyone thought.

The finding helps explain the many skilful tasks Neanderthals have been shown to have performed, like making tools, painting on cave walls, carving patterns into bird bones and threading sea shells onto string to make jewellery. These activities were hard to explain if they were clumsy.

Neanderthal hand bones were much chunkier than ours, implying a lack of fine control. Previous studies of聽the bones mostly suggested Neanderthals could not perform a 鈥減recision grip鈥 with finger and thumb, and instead had to use a 鈥減ower grip鈥 using their whole fist 鈥 the way small children sometimes hold crayons.

To find out how they used their hands, of the University of T眉bingen in Germany and her colleagues studied 鈥渆ntheses鈥: the points on the bones where muscles were attached.

Each enthesis is a raised area of bone. 鈥淭o the touch it feels like a smooth bump on the surface of the bone,鈥 says Harvati. Her team has developed a 3D scanning method that accurately measures their surface area. A precision grip uses a different set of muscles to a power grip, and those muscles that get used more develop larger entheses. Harvati鈥檚 team previously showed this by .

Precision grips

The team examined the hand entheses of six Neanderthals and six early modern humans. The Neanderthals spent most of their time using precision grips, while the early modern humans used both precision and power grips.

鈥淥ur study reconciles the archaeological with the anatomical fossil evidence,鈥 says Harvati. 鈥淚t was previously proposed that Neanderthals relied on force for their manual activities,鈥 but this perception 鈥渨as at odds with mounting archaeological evidence for sophisticated cultural behaviour of Neanderthals鈥.

The fact the Neanderthals only used precision grips 鈥渟uggests that the nature of their activities did not substantially differ across individuals鈥, says Harvati. While each Neanderthal probably performed a mix of tasks, these tasks were likely similar. In contrast, the modern humans seemed to have had a division of labour. The sample 鈥渃omprised some individuals with habitual precision grips, and some with habitual power grips鈥.

Science Advances

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