First published at 04:03 UTC on August 21st, 2019.
Venus figurines are the stone-age Paleolithic females statues found in much of Europe, Russia, and pockets of Middle East. Venus figurines, some covered in red ocher, generally date between 11,00 years to 40,000 years old, with one outlier in Israel…
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Venus figurines are the stone-age Paleolithic females statues found in much of Europe, Russia, and pockets of Middle East. Venus figurines, some covered in red ocher, generally date between 11,00 years to 40,000 years old, with one outlier in Israel that is thought to have been created by Homo Erectus.
The big question is: Are the Venus figurines, female figures with exaggerated sexual anatomy parts (breasts, hips, uvula) really made by Cro-Magnom that later evolved to Homo Sapiens, or are they another example of a newly discovered type of Neanderthal art?
Few academic, if any, have yet to propose this idea. Perhaps because the dates of the supposed Neanderthal presence doesn’t quite align with the date of when Homo Sapiens or Cro-Magnom [archaic human with higher Neanderthal DNA] first arrived in Europe. We attempt to showcase evidence, especially with Gobekli Tepe (by Michael Collins) that Neanderthals may have lived much longer, up till 12,800 years ago.
But if Neanderthals can be determined to have outlived the 40,000 year benchmark commonly assumed by academics, would it make more sense to think that the Venus figurines, whose anatomy more closely fit the Neanderthals, actually be Neanderthal as opposed to the previously assumed Homo Sapiens (Cro-Magnom)?
New research has expanded on the idea that Neanderthals were not just anatomically adapt at doing fine arts with their hands, they also harbored the dream-quality intelligence to be cognitively capable of doing so. The cave painting evidence in caves like the El-Castillo caves in Spain, which were dated to 64,800 yeas ago (via red ocher) seem to indicate that Neanderthals were responsible for cave art paintings that were previously thought to be exclusively human made.
Could the Venus figurine artifacts discovered in much of Europe, Upper Middle East, and Russia just be another example of how little we underestimated our cavemen cousins?
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