Here’s A 120,000-Year-Old Tumour Found Inside A Neanderthal

Here’s A 120,000-Year-Old Tumour Found Inside A Neanderthal

Neanderthals weren’t smoking cigarettes. They weren’t breathing in pollution. They weren’t eating processed foods. They weren’t dealing with pesticides. Nope. But apparently Neanderthals still got cancer. This 120,000-year-old bone fragment reveals a cancerous tumour. Neanderthals, they’re just like us.

The case of fibrous dysplasia in this Neanderthal bone is believed to be the oldest tumour ever found. It predates other tumours by a 100,000 years, which ain’t no small chunk of change. David Frayer, an anthropologist at the University of Kansas and co-author of the paper revealing this discovery, theorises:

“They didn’t have pesticides, but they probably were sleeping in caves with burning fires. They were probably inhaling a lot of smoke from the caves. So the air was not completely free of pollutants — but certainly, these Neanderthals weren’t smoking cigarettes.”

To discover the tumour, the researchers used a micro-CT scan machine which cuts up an image into different frames. The 1.18-inch long Neanderthal rib bone was sliced to 500 distinct frames which let researchers study every micron of the bone, thus revealing the tumour. [PLOS ONE via National Geographic via Neatorama]


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