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Famous Neanderthal ‘flower burial’ debunked because pollen was left by burrowing bees


Scientists are blaming an unsuspecting creature for disturbing a 75,000-year-old Neanderthal burial: burrowing bees. These insects may have hidden pollen underneath a Neanderthal’s remains, tricking researchers into thinking the Neanderthal had been buried on top of a bed of flowers, a new study finds.

The flower burial interpretation blossomed over half a century ago, when researchers found the site of Shanidar, a rocky cave in the Zagros Mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan that held several Neanderthal burials. One of these, which scientists called Shanidar 4, became known as the “flower burial” when researchers discovered clumps of pollen from flowering plants in the soil underneath an adult male Neanderthal.

The burials at Shanidar, initially excavated in the 1950s and 1960s, were the first evidence that Neanderthals, cousins on our evolutionary tree, engaged in ritual depositing of dead bodies.

Wildflowers bloom around at Shanidar Cave, as photographed on May 5. (Image credit: Photograph by C.O. Hunt)

Although evidence of Neanderthal burial is no longer controversial in the field of archaeology, the interpretation of pollen as evidence of a flower-adorned burial ritual is still debated.

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