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    Owl-like engravings from Copper Age may have been made by children

    Slate plaques from about 5000 years ago engraved with images of what look like owls may have been children’s artwork rather than funeral offerings, but not everyone is convinced

    Humans

    1 December 2022

    By Carissa Wong
    Could slate plaques like these (the one on the left is a replica) have been made by children?Juan J. Negro
    Slate plaques engraved with owl-like features may have mainly been children’s artwork rather than funeral offerings as previously proposed, but the idea is controversial.
    For over a century, researchers have debated the meaning of thousands of palm-sized slate plaques mainly found at burial sites in the south-western Iberian Peninsula, dating to communities living there in the Copper Age some 5000 years ago.
    Archaeologists have previously suggested that the dozens of plaques bearing an owl-like image were symbols of goddesses that were placed on deceased people as a burial offering. It is debated whether the engravings are of owls, people or other figures.Advertisement

    Now, Juan Negro at the Spanish National Research Council and his colleagues propose that children engraved owls on the slate – using copper, flint or quartz tools.
    Each plaque has a body and a head with a range of engraved features resembling owl beaks, feathers and large eyes.
    The team compared engravings on plaques with drawings of owls made by children aged between 4 and 13 today and found that the quality and variation in the “owliness” of the plaques was similar to the modern drawings.
    “We propose these plaques may have resulted from children playing – though we cannot put an age to it,” says Negro. “This is not incompatible with the idea that the plaques may also have then been used in rituals as burial offerings.”
    Many of the plaques also have small holes in them through which string may have been passed, according to previous interpretations. Instead of string, Negro’s team suggest that bird feathers could have been placed in the holes to mimic the tufts on a native owl.
    This interpretation isn’t accepted by all.
    Drawings of owls done by childrenJuan J. Negro
    “I applaud the attempt to bring children, who are under-conceptualised in archaeological theory, into our picture of prehistory,” says Jonathan Thomas at the University of Iowa. But comparing the engravings to modern drawings by school children isn’t solid evidence, he says.

    The idea that feathers were stuffed in the holes also isn’t strong in comparison to the conventional interpretation, he says. “I don’t disagree that Copper Age adolescents likely made plaques, and that some archaeological plaques look like owls, but the authors don’t present any real scientific evidence that would suggest adolescents in particular were making owl plaques in particular,” says Thomas.
    Katina Lillios at the University of Iowa is also unconvinced. “If children, as the largest demographic of these communities, were making them, these kinds of plaques should be much more common, when in fact, those plaques with owl-like qualities make up only about 4 per cent of all plaques,” she says.
    The fact that the owl-like plaques show such consistency and are so widely dispersed suggests that there was a standard way in which they were made, and that they weren’t the playful creations of children, says Lillios.
    Journal reference: Nature Scientific Reports , DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-23530-0
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    The best non-fiction books of 2022: A feast for the soul

    From concrete dinosaurs to human evolution, exquisite plants to space travel, we pick the best non-fiction to give to those you love this year

    Humans

    30 November 2022

    By Simon Ings
    Mikhail Mikheev/EyeEm
    TRAWLING through the year’s science books is a good way to restore perspective. They tackle everything from imagining the new world that emerged after the dinosaurs were wiped out to understanding our own place in nature by exploring the woods, and from extending our senses to the value of emotions. Enjoy our selection: many of our picks were reviewed in these pages, but they are all terrific reads and will make great gifts.

    From dinosaurs to plants
    It is just as well that the world is full of surprises because the human appetite for … More

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    The best science fiction books of 2022: Uncertainty, dystopia and hope

    Uncertainty and crisis are key to this year’s best sci-fi offerings, from Janelle Monáe’s The Memory Librarian to Ray Nayler’s The Mountain in the Sea

    Humans

    30 November 2022

    By Sally Adee
    Shutterstock/Vasilyev Alexandr
    EVERY era of science fiction reflects its times. Iconic 1950s sci-fi was all lone male heroes and alien encounters. In 2022, uncertainty and fluidity rule, as we struggle to find a way out of a polycrisis of our own making, armed only with hope. Buckle up for the year’s best sci-fi.

    “We already believed in the infinite web, so why not hard-wire an eye to each of its strands?” And that is how a fascist AI called New Dawn takes over in Janelle Monáe’s The Memory Librarian (Harper Collins, pictured above). … More

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    Don't miss: Troll, where heroes fight to save Oslo from an ancient foe

    New Scientist’s weekly round-up of the best books, films, TV series, games and more that you shouldn’t miss

    Humans

    23 November 2022

    TrollJallo Faber/Netflix
    Watch
    Troll follows a ragtag group of heroes who set out to save Oslo from an ancient threat (pictured above). Delayed by covid-19, this is the new film from Roar Uthaug, director of disaster movie The Wave. Airs on Netflix from 1 December.

    Read
    Changing How We Choose is possible, says neuroscientist A. David Redish. Drawing on research in behavioural economics, sociology and neuroscience, he argues that there is a “new science of morality”. On sale from 6 December.
    MattLphotography/Alamy
    Visit
    The Science … More

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    Utama review: An unsettling look at climate change in Bolivia

    The threat of climate change permeates this visually stunning, memorable film about a couple living through drought in the Bolivian highlands

    Humans

    23 November 2022

    By Elle Hunt
    Utama is visually stunning, with dramatic shots of the arid horizonConic
    Utama
    Alejandro Loayza Grisi
    On limited release in cinemas
    LIFE in the highlands of Bolivia, more than 3500 metres above sea level, has always been at the mercy of the elements.
    Virginio and Sisa have lived on the Andean plateau of western Bolivia all their lives, in a modest mud house without electricity or running water, tending to livestock and growing crops in one of the most exposed environments on Earth.
    It is a precarious existence, but with many decades … More

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    How to hack your macaroni cheese

    You won’t need to make a flour roux for your macaroni cheese if you cook your pasta in milk rather than water, says Sam Wong

    Humans

    23 November 2022

    By Sam Wong
    Shutterstock/foodstck
    CHEESE sauce is one of the first things I remember learning to cook as a child. You melt butter in a pan, whisk in the flour and cook for 2 minutes. Then, gradually add the milk, whisking vigorously to avoid lumps. Simmer until it thickens, then mix in the cheese.
    I must have made macaroni cheese this way dozens of times, but I might never do so again since learning of an ingenious shortcut.
    Before I get to that, let’s consider why we need flour in a cheese sauce in the first place. The starch in flour plays two important roles here. One is to thicken … More

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    The ancestral language of half the world reveals our shared culture

    The hunt for the prehistoric mother tongue that gave rise to dozens of the languages we speak today reminds us of the scientific case for international identity

    Humans

    | Leader

    23 November 2022

    Shutterstock/ivosar
    WHEN it comes to communicating and connecting with others, language is the most important tool we have. But it isn’t always a unifying force. A survey of people in 14 high-income countries, for example, found that language was considered by far the most critical factor in defining national identity, which suggests we tend to think people who don’t speak “our national language” may not belong.
    The reconstruction of prehistoric languages offers an intriguing antidote to this way of thinking. As we explore in a feature this week, “The hunt for the lost ancestral language of Europe and southern Asia“, many of the world’s tongues share … More

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    The hunt for the lost ancestral language of Europe and southern Asia

    We’ve long known there was an ancient language that gave rise to English, Bengali and dozens of other tongues – now we’re on the brink of working out where Proto-Indo-European was spoken

    Humans

    23 November 2022

    By Andrea Valentino
    Andy Smith
    MOTHER. There can scarcely be a more emotive word in the English language. We can imagine children howling it as they wake from nightmares, and centenarians whispering it on their death beds. A 2004 survey proclaimed it the most beautiful word in English, and artists have evoked it in countless poems and plays. Yet even though it can conjure home and hearth in a scant two syllables, mother is perhaps most remarkable for its deluge of cousins. From Dutch (moeder) to Czech (matka) to Bengali (ma), dozens of languages have words that share a common root with mother, tying English to a cobweb of tongues that straddles almost every continent.
    Human societies can’t exist without language, and no language family has shaped our world as much as Indo-European. It boasts well over 3 billion speakers, or an estimated 46 per cent of everyone on Earth. From the moment this language family was recognised, scholars have been searching for the answer to a weighty question. Who spoke the Indo-European mother tongue – dubbed Proto-Indo-European (PIE) – that splintered into the hundreds of daughters we hear today?
    The quest has thrilled and frustrated experts for centuries, with the evidence sometimes pointing in opposing directions. Yet the field is far from deadlocked. With the power of DNA at their heels, geneticists are making new claims about PIE, a language that may predate civilisation. Meanwhile, linguistic studies now suggest we can trace the roots of Indo-European languages even further back than PIE, to the world that existed shortly after farming took hold in south-west Asia. Not that any of this is straightforward – or without controversy.
    The … More