Ice age infant skeletons found

Published September 25, 2005

VIENNA: The 27,000 year old skeletons of two ice age infants have been found near Krems in northern Austria, the first discovery of its kind in Europe, the Austrian press reported on Saturday.

The perfectly preserved skeletons measuring 40 centimetres had been protected by a mammoth’s shoulder-blade bone, under which they had been buried on a sheltered hillside on the banks of the Danube river.

The grave, discovered 5.5 metres below ground, also contained a necklace of 31 pearls made from mammoth ivory and was located next to an area inhabited by ancient “homo sapiens fossilis”, newspapers reported.

“It is the first discovery of a child’s grave dating from this period,” confirmed the excavation manager, Christine Neugebauer-Maresch, to the daily newspaper Kurier.

“They may have been twins, but we have not yet been able to establish that,” she told Die Presse.

The age of the skeletons will be analysed by the Institute of Natural Sciences in Vienna, which will also determine the cause of death.

“Homo sapiens fossilis” came out of Asia during the ice age as Neanderthal Man was dying out, and mastered stone and wood, but did not discover metal.—AFP

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