thumb|upright=1.37|The expansion of [[European early modern humans|early modern humans from the Levant where the Levantine Aurignacian stage has been identified]]

The Aurignacian () is an archaeological industry of the Upper Paleolithic associated with Early European modern humans (EEMH) lasting from 43,000 to 26,000 years ago in most areas and lasting until about 17,000 years ago in Ukraine in the form of the Epi-Aurignacian. The Upper Paleolithic developed in Europe some time after the Levant, where the Emiran period and the Ahmarian period form the first periods of the Upper Paleolithic, corresponding to the first stages of the expansion of Homo sapiens out of Africa. They then migrated to Europe and created the first European culture of modern humans, the Aurignacian.

The type site is the Cave of Aurignac, Haute-Garonne, south-west France. The main preceding period is the Mousterian of the Neanderthals.

One of the oldest examples of figurative art, the Venus of Hohle Fels, comes from the Aurignacian or Proto-Gravettian and is dated to between 40,000 and 35,000 years ago (though earlier figurative art may now be known, such as at the Lubang Jeriji Saléh site in Indonesia). It was discovered in September 2008 in a cave at Schelklingen in Baden-Württemberg in western Germany. The German Lion-man figure is given a similar date range.

A Levantine Aurignacian culture is known from the Levant, with a type of blade technology very similar to the European Aurignacian, following chronologically the Emiran and Early Ahmarian in the same area of the Near East, and also closely related to them. The Levantine Aurignacian may have preceded European Aurignacian, but there is a possibility that the Levantine Aurignacian was rather the result of reverse influence from the European Aurignacian; this remains unsettled.

Main characteristics

thumb|The [[Löwenmensch figurine|Lion-man of Hohlenstein-Stadel, Germany, 40,000 BP|296x296px]]

The Aurignacians are part of the wave of anatomically modern humans thought to have spread from Africa through the Near East into Paleolithic Europe, and became known as European early modern humans, or Cro-Magnons.

The Aurignacian tool industry is characterized by worked bone or antler points with grooves cut in the bottom. Their flint tools include fine blades and bladelets struck from prepared cores rather than using crude flakes. The people of this culture also produced some of the earliest known cave art, such as the animal engravings at Trois Freres and the paintings at Chauvet Cave in southern France. They also made pendants, bracelets, and ivory beads, as well as three-dimensional figurines. Perforated rods, thought to be spear throwers or shaft wrenches, also are found at their sites.

Art

Aurignacian figurines have been found depicting faunal representations of the time period associated with now-extinct mammals, including mammoths, rhinoceros, and tarpan, along with anthropomorphized depictions that may be interpreted as some of the earliest evidence of religion.

Many 35,000-year-old animal figurines were discovered in the Vogelherd Cave in Germany. One of the horses, amongst six tiny mammoth and horse ivory figures found previously at Vogelherd, was sculpted as skillfully as any piece found throughout the Upper Paleolithic. The production of ivory beads for body ornamentation was also important during the Aurignacian. The famous paintings in Chauvet cave date from this period.

Typical statuettes consist of women that are called Venus figurines. They emphasize the hips, breasts, and other body parts associated with fertility. Feet and arms are lacking or minimized. One of the most ancient figurines is the Venus of Hohle Fels, discovered in 2008 in the Hohle Fels cave in Germany. The figurine has been dated to 35,000 years ago and is the earliest known, undisputed example of a depiction of a human being in prehistoric art. The Lion-man of Hohlenstein-Stadel, found in the Hohlenstein-Stadel cave of Germany's Swabian Alb and dated to 40,000 years ago, is the oldest known anthropomorphic animal figurine in the world.

Aurignacian finds include bone flutes. The oldest undisputed musical instrument was the Hohle Fels Flute discovered in the Hohle Fels cave in Germany's Swabian Alb in 2008. A flute was also found at the Abri Blanchard in southwestern France.

Subsistence economy

The great bulk of evidence from this period suggests that large game meat made up a large part of the Early Upper Paleolithic diet, although humans probably did have a more diverse diet overall than Neanderthals, having more plants, fish, and birds as well. Great climatic fluctuations probably also affected these percentages on a local level, and subsistence patterns certainly were not uniform. One area might have a greater emphasis on larger game, while another, Northern Spain for example, shows a fairly diverse amount of species hunted from a fairly diverse array of habitats, including "red and roe deer, boar, horse, bovids, ibex, and chamois". Settlement practices were similarly very diverse and highly dependent on local conditions. As for trade, evidence suggests both an increase in the mobility and range of groups as well as an increase in inter-group exchange. According to cited text "Sites in Lower Austria, such as Krems-Hundsteig, contain shells from either the Mediterranean, about 300 kilometers away today, or the Black Sea, approximately 600 kilometers away (Hahn 1971). Small amounts of stone or fossils in Aurignacian sites of Moravia, southern Germany and the Rhineland can be traced to sources from 50 to over 200 kilometers away (Hahn 1987, Svoboda et al.1996). "

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File:A 41,500 year-old decorated ivory pendant from Stajnia Cave (Poland) 1.png|Decorated ivory pendant from Stajnia Cave, Poland, c. 41,500 BP

File:Floete Schwanenknochen Geissenkloesterle Blaubeuren.jpg|Bone flute, 35,000-40,000 years old

File:Adorant, Geisenklösterle, Blaubeuren-Weiler, Alb-Donau-Kreis, Aurignacian culture, 35,000 to 45,000 years old, ivory - Landesmuseum Württemberg - Stuttgart, Germany - DSC02709.jpg|The Adorant of Geissenklösterle, Germany

File:Geissenklösterle ivory 1.jpg|The Adorant of Geissenklösterle, reverse side with notches

File:Venus of Hohle Fels URMU.jpg|The Venus of Hohle Fels figurine (height 6&nbsp;cm), 35,000 BP

File:MUT-9846.jpg|Horse figurine from Vogelherd Cave, Germany

File:MUT127054.jpg|Animal figurine from Vogelherd Cave

File:Chauvet´s cave horses.jpg|Chauvet Cave painting, France

File:Aurignacian musical bow.jpg|Possible musical bow from Geisenklösterle, Germany

File:Vogelherd cave lion 3.jpg|Lion head sculpture, Vogelherd cave

File:MUT Löwe.JPG|Lion sculpture, Vogelherd cave

File:Vogelherd Mammut 2006.jpg|Mammoth sculpture, Vogelherd cave

File:Venus vom Galgenberg.JPG|Venus of Galgenberg, Austria

File:Paleolithic ivory 1.jpg|Carved ivory from Brillenhöhle cave

File:Engraved plaque from Lartet.jpg|Engraved plaque from Abri Lartet, France

File:Blanchard plaque.jpg|Engraved plaque from Abri Blanchard, France

File:Worlds Oldest Necklace (NBY 415421).jpg|Necklace from Castel Merle, France

File:Pendants, Aurignacian culture, 31000-24000 BC, various materials - Cinquantenaire Museum - Brussels, Belgium - DSC08704.jpg|Aurignacian jewellery, Belgium

File:Grotte d'Aurignac-Main en réserve-1962.jpg|A painting of a hand in the Cave of Aurignac, France

File:Stone Age Jewelry, Fazael, Upper Paleolithic, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem.jpg|Jewelry, Fazael, Israel, Upper Paleolithic.

File:Stone Age Animal Carving, Hayonim Cave, 28000 BP.jpg|A carving of a running horse, Hayonim Cave, Levant.

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Tools

Stone tools from the Aurignacian culture are known as Mode 4, characterized by blades (rather than flakes, typical of mode 2 Acheulean and mode 3 Mousterian) from prepared cores. Also seen throughout the Upper Paleolithic is a greater degree of tool standardization and the use of bone and antler for tools. Based on the research of scraper reduction and paleoenvironment, the early Aurignacian group moved seasonally over greater distances to procure reindeer herds within cold and open environments than those of the earlier tool cultures.

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Image:Sagaie base fendue.jpg|A bone point

Image:(MHNT) Grattoir à museau plat sur lame LARTET.jpg|A scraper from Aurignac (France)

Image:Lames aurignaciennes.jpg|Aurignacian blades

Image:Pointe à dos MHNT.PRE.2009.0.227.4 (2).jpg|Dufour bladelet

File:Aurignacian Culture Bone Tools, Hayonim Cave, 30000 BP.jpg|Bone tools, Hayonim Cave, 30000 BP.

File:Aurignacien - Feuersteingeräte. Fundstücke aus der Göpfelsteinhöhle in Veringenstadt.jpg|Aurignacian microliths

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Population

thumb|upright|Forensic reconstruction of the [[Kostenki-14 modern human (38,700–36,200 year ago), considered as Aurignacian. M. M. Gerasimov, Moscow State Archaeological Museum]]

A 2019 demographic analysis estimated a mean population of 1,500 persons (upper limit: 3,300; lower limit: 800) for western and central Europe during the Aurignacian period (~42,000 to 33,000 y cal BP).

A 2005 study estimated the population of Upper Palaeolithic Europe from 40 to 30 thousand years ago was 1,738–28,359 (average 4,424).

Association with modern humans

The sophistication and self-awareness demonstrated in the work led archaeologists to consider the makers of Aurignacian artifacts the first modern humans in Europe. Human remains and Late Aurignacian artifacts found in juxtaposition support this inference. Although finds of human skeletal remains in direct association with Proto-Aurignacian technologies are scarce in Europe, the few available are also probably modern human. The best dated association between Aurignacian industries and human remains are those of at least five individuals from the Mladeč caves in the Czech Republic, dated by direct radiocarbon measurements of the skeletal remains to at least 31,000–32,000 years old.

Genetics

thumb|Genetic position of the [[Goyet Caves|Goyet cluster, corresponding to the Aurignacian, in relation to other hunter-gatherers]]

In a genetic study published in Nature in May 2016, the remains of an early Aurignacian individual, Goyet Q116-1 from modern-day Belgium, were examined. He belonged to the paternal haplogroup C1a and the maternal haplogroup M. Haplogroups identified in other Aurignacian samples are the paternal haplogroups C1b and K2a; and mt-DNA haplogroup N, R, and U.

The Aurignacian material culture is associated with the expansion of "early West Eurasians" during the Upper Paleolithic (UP), replacing or merging with previous Initial Upper Paleolithic (IUP) cultures to which possibly relates the European Châtelperronian. Evidence for at least some IUP legacy among later UP Europeans is the presence of Ancient East Eurasian ancestry (c. 17–23%) among the GoyetQ116-1 specimen, possibly represented by the preceding Bacho Kiro cave specimen, who, together with the Oase specimens, are closer to ancient and modern East Eurasian populations. The 38kya Kostenki-14 specimen from eastern Europe did not display evidence for IUP-affiliated admixture. Villalba-Mouco et al. (2023) argues that this IUP-affiliated population pre-dated the split between European and Asian populations.

A 2023 study found that the Aurignacians are closely related to the Gravettians, Solutreans and later Magdalenians. Gravettian-producing peoples belonged to two genetically distinct clusters. Fournol in the west (France and Spain) and Věstonice in the east (Czech Republic, Poland, Austria, and Italy), both tracing their descent from producers of the earlier Aurignacian culture. The Aurignacian, Gravettian, and Solutrean cultures would merge and give rise to the Magdalenian culture. The genes of seven Magdalenians, the El Miron Cluster in Iberia, showed a close relationship to the Aurignacian population that lived in northern Europe some 20,000 years earlier. The analyses suggested that 70-80% of the ancestry of these individuals was from the population represented by Goyet Q116-1, associated with the Aurignacian culture.

A 2023 palaeogenomic study found that most post-14,000-year-old hunter-gatherers from western and central Europe fall close to the Western Hunter-Gatherer or Oberkassel cluster, which is related to Villabruna/Epigravettian-associated ancestry from southern Europe. This ancestry spread widely after about 14,000 years ago and largely replaced the Magdalenian-associated GoyetQ2 gene pool in much of western and central Europe. Earlier palaeogenomic work also found that sampled European individuals between about 37,000 and 14,000 years ago, including Villabruna, descended from a single founder population contributing to present-day Europeans, while the 2023 study identified Kostenki 14, Goyet Q116-1 and Bacho Kiro 1653 as among the oldest genomes carrying ancestries derived primarily from the lineage leading to present-day Europeans.

Siberia

  • Many sites in Siberia including around Lake Baikal, the Ob River valley, and Minusinsk.

Aurignac-grotte-01.JPG|Entrance porch of the Cave of Aurignac

File:מערת יונים.jpg|Hayonim Cave

Bacho Kiro Cave.jpg|Interior of Bacho Kiro cave

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See also

  • Cave of Aurignac
  • Ksar Akil
  • Venus figurine
  • Bacho Kiro cave
  • Montgaudier Cave

Notes

References

Sources

  • Picture Gallery of the Paleolithic (reconstructional palaeoethnology), Libor Balák at the Czech Academy of Sciences, the Institute of Archaeology in Brno, the Center for Paleolithic and Paleoethnological Research