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'Oldest musical instrument' found
Humanity's creative spirit was widespread much earlier than previously thought. Music gave the human species an edge over the Neanderthals.
By Pallab Ghosh
Science correspondent, BBC News
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Scientists in Germany have published details of flutes dating back to the time that modern humans began colonising Europe, 35,000 years ago.
The flutes are the oldest musical instruments found to date.
The researchers say in the Journal Nature that music was widespread in pre-historic times.
Music, they suggest, may have been one of a suite of behaviours displayed by our own species which helped give them an edge over the Neanderthals.
The team from Tubingen University have published details of three flutes found in the Hohle Fels cavern in southwest Germany.
The cavern is already well known as a site for signs of early human efforts; in May, members of the same team unveiled a Hohle Fels find that could be the world's oldest Venus figure.
The most well-preserved of the flutes is made from a vulture's wing bone, measuring 20cm long with five finger holes and two "V"-shaped notches on one end of the instrument into which the researchers assume the player blew.
The archaeologists also found fragments of two other flutes carved from ivory that they believe was taken from the tusks of mammoths.
Creative origins
The find brings the total number of flutes discovered from this era to eight, four made from mammoth ivory and four made from bird bones.
According to Professor Nicholas Conard of Tubingen University, this suggests that the playing of music was common as far back as 40,000 years ago when modern humans spread across Europe.
"It's becoming increasingly clear that music was part of day-to-day life," he said.
"Music was used in many kinds of social contexts: possibly religious, possibly recreational - much like we use music today in many kinds of settings."
These flutes provide yet more evidence of the sophistication of the people that lived at that time
Professor Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum
Researchers also suggest that not only was music widespread much earlier than previously thought, but so was humanity's creative spirit.
"The modern humans that came into our area already had a whole range of symbolic artifacts, figurative art, depictions of mythological creatures, many kinds of personal ornaments and also a well-developed musical tradition," Professor Conard explained.
The team argues that the emergence of art and culture so early might explain why early modern humans survived and Neanderthals, with whom they co-existed at the time, became extinct.
Read the rest of this report online



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 07:36 on July 4th, 2009
Music is so important! Even then.
at 19:42 on July 4th, 2009
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Sara star.
Yes, I imagine people who lived in the elements all the time would naturally feel they were one with the harmonics of the universe - with all living beings as well as the stars above – the "music of the spheres" - which reminds me - we watched a wonderful film last night, which touches on that – August Rush.
I found a good quote recently, attributed to Carl Jung: "The detailed description of the life of primitive hunters and food gatherers has shown that – at least since he fully emerged fifty-thousand years ago – was most likely not the brutal, destructive, cruel being and hence not the prototype of "man the killer" that we find in more-developed stages of his evolution."