Trending

#SymbolicBehavior

Latest posts tagged with #SymbolicBehavior on Bluesky

Latest Top
Trending

Posts tagged #SymbolicBehavior

Post image Post image Post image

Neanderthals engraved abstract marks deep inside caves.

That’s not survival behavior — it’s symbolic choice.

This question is the focus of my MA thesis.

👉 How do you interpret Neanderthal rock art?

#Neanderthals #SymbolicBehavior #DeepHistory #HumanOrigins #Anthropology

6 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image

Neanderthals made shell beads and covered them in pigment — long before modern humans did.

That’s symbolic behavior.

👉 Why do you think they wore them?

#Neanderthals #SymbolicBehavior #DeepHistory #HumanOrigins #Anthropology

2 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image

Neanderthals built deliberate stone structures deep inside Bruniquel Cave — in total darkness.

Not survival.
Intentional design.

👉 Why do you think they did it?

#Neanderthals #BruniquelCave #DeepHistory #SymbolicBehavior #HumanOrigins

4 0 0 1
Post image Post image Post image

Neanderthals selectively collected feathers — not for food, not for tools.

That’s symbolism.

👉 Why do you think feathers mattered to them?

#Neanderthals #DeepHistory #SymbolicBehavior #HumanOrigins #Anthropology

6 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Neanderthals used ochre, feathers, engravings, and ornaments.

That’s symbolism — not survival.

👉 What do you think Neanderthal symbols were for?

#WOPA #Neanderthals #SymbolicBehavior #DeepHistory #HumanOrigins

0 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image

Red isn’t decoration — it’s information.
At Blombos Cave, Homo sapiens used ochre for engraving, pigment processing, and symbolic practices ~100,000 years ago, revealing planning, abstraction, and shared meaning deep in the Middle Stone Age.

#PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #SymbolicBehavior #Ochre

1 0 1 0
Post image Post image Post image

Fumane Cave, Italy (~44 ka): cut, peeling & scrape marks on raptor/corvid wing bones point to feather extraction—non-food use by late Neanderthals. #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #Neanderthals #SymbolicBehavior
Paper: europepmc.org/articles/PMC...

3 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Qafzeh Cave, Israel (~120 ka): Glycymeris shells—naturally perforated, ochre-stained, with suspension wear—were carried 40–100 km inland and strung as ornaments. #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #Qafzeh #SymbolicBehavior
Paper: in-africa.org/wp-content/u...

2 1 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Cueva de los Aviones, Spain (≥115 ka): Neanderthals used ochred, perforated shells and mixed pigments in a Spondylus “container”—symbolic palettes by the sea. #PaleoPost #Neanderthals #SymbolicBehavior
Paper: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

2 1 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Taforalt, Morocco (~82 ka): perforated Nassarius gibbosulus shells with use-wear and ochre = early personal ornaments. #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #Taforalt #SymbolicBehavior
Paper: www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

1 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image

Krapina, Croatia (~130 ka): eight white-tailed eagle talons show smoothed cut marks, polished facets & small notches—clear Neanderthal ornaments. #PaleoPost #Neanderthals #Krapina #SymbolicBehavior
Paper: doi.org/10.1371/jour...

26 6 2 0
Post image Post image Post image

Diepkloof Rock Shelter (South Africa, ~60 ka): ostrich eggshell water containers carry standardized hatched-band engravings—an early graphic tradition. #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #HowiesonsPoort #SymbolicBehavior
Paper: www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...

4 1 0 0
Post image

Signals before speech. Bizmoune Cave, Morocco: 33 perforated Tritia (Nassarius) gibbosula shells from MSA Layer 4c, dated ≥142 ka—earliest known beads linked to early H. sapiens. #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #SymbolicBehavior #MSA doi.org/10.1126/scia...

5 3 0 0
Post image

Before Sephora, there was ochre. Engraved at Blombos Cave ~77kya, it shows some of the earliest symbolic art.
🔬 Henshilwood et al. 2009: doi.org/10.1016/j.jh...
#PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #SymbolicBehavior #BlombosCave

3 1 0 1
Post image

Tiny beads, big networks. OES bead styles link groups across Africa ~50–33 ka—social ties spanning long distances. Read: www.nature.com/articles/s41... #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #SymbolicBehavior #DeepHistory

4 0 1 0
Post image

Stone Age drip: shell beads as identity + belonging. New evidence from Bizmoune Cave (Morocco) pushes it ≥142k years. Read: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC... #PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #SymbolicBehavior #MiddleStoneAge

3 0 0 0
Post image

Before there was art, there was memory. Ochre wasn’t just decoration—it was declaration. These ancient streaks marked water, movement, meaning. They spoke without words and endured without sound.
#PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #SymbolicBehavior #DeepHistory #FirstArtists

12 1 0 0
Post image

Half a million years before memes, Homo erectus carved zigzags into a shell. Is it art? A mark of ownership? Or just an ancient “I was here”?
#PaleoPost #HumanOrigins #FossilFriday #TrinilShell #SymbolicBehavior

8 2 1 1
Post image

A small brain didn’t stop ancient minds from thinking deeply.
Burials, art, and memory aren’t exclusive to us — and they never were.
#WOPA #SymbolicBehavior #FossilFriday #HomininCognition #PaleoPost

14 4 0 1
Post image

THE DAWN OF SYMBOLIC BEHAVIOR
Long before writing, there were hands on stone. These ancient stencils tell us early humans weren’t just surviving—they were expressing.
Art. Identity. Meaning.
Left behind in pigment, still speaking across millennia.

#SymbolicBehavior #CaveArt #PaleoPost #WOPA

5 1 0 0