8 Surprising Facts About Neanderthal Dentistry: The 60,000-Year-Old Tooth That Rewrites History
By

Imagine visiting the dentist 60,000 years ago. That’s exactly what a recent archaeological discovery suggests happened to a Neanderthal in Siberia. A remarkable tooth, unearthed from an ancient site, bears a perfectly drilled hole—likely made by a stone tool. This find pushes back the earliest known evidence of intentional dentistry by tens of thousands of years and challenges our understanding of Neanderthal intelligence and culture. In this listicle, we explore eight fascinating details about this groundbreaking discovery and what it tells us about our ancient relatives.

Related Articles
- Mapping Martian Ice with Drone-Mounted Radar: A Step-by-Step Guide to Subsurface Water Detection
- The Surprising Link Between Black Holes and White Holes: A Quantum Perspective
- Canada Unveils POET Mission to Discover Earth-Sized Exoplanets
- Orbital Data Centers: A Practical Guide to Overcoming the Rocket Shortage
- Global Leaders Forge Path Away from Fossil Fuels at Historic Santa Marta Summit
- Supercomputer Simulations Unlock Dolphins' High-Speed Propulsion Secret
- Pinpointing the Culprit: Automated Failure Attribution in LLM Multi-Agent Systems
- Shiveluch: Kamchatka's Most Active Volcano in a Q&A Deep Dive