Neanderthal ‘dentists’ used stone drills to treat cavities, study says,
They’re commonly depicted as primitive and uncivilised, but Neanderthal ‘dentists’ used stone drills to treat cavities 60,000 years ago, a study reveals.
Experts have discovered the ancient species had the know–how to identify an infected tooth and the skills to drill out the damage.
Archaeological discoveries have previously shown that Neanderthals used toothpicks to remove food from their teeth and might also have used medicinal plants.
But this new study marks the first time an operation of this kind has been demonstrated outside of our own Homo sapiens species.
The researchers, from the Russian Academy of Sciences, said it marks the world’s oldest evidence of successful dental treatment.
‘Treating a carious (decayed) tooth is not just feeding or guarding someone,’ Dr Ksenia Kolobova, one of the study’s authors, said.
‘It requires diagnosing the source of pain, selecting an appropriate tool, performing a painful, invasive action, and persisting despite the patient’s discomfort. That is active, targeted medical intervention.
‘It suggests Neanderthals understood cause and effect. This is a cognitive leap beyond instinct.’
The researchers found an ancient molar dating back nearly 60,000 years. In the centre of the tooth is a deep hole extending into the pulp cavity
The Neanderthal who this tooth belonged to would have been in ‘significant pain’, the researchers said
For the new study, published in the journal Plos One, researchers analysed a single molar found in the Chagyrskaya Cave in Russia which dates back around 59,000 years.
In the centre of the tooth is a deep hole extending into the pulp cavity. This would have allowed for the removal of decayed tissue.
The researchers conducted experiments on three modern human teeth to demonstrate that a hole of the same shape and same patterns of microscopic grooves can be created by drilling into the tooth with a stone point similar to tools that have been found within Chagyrskaya Cave.
‘The individual with the infected molar would have been in significant pain, perhaps unable to chew properly, which could lead to malnutrition or infection spreading to the jawbone,’ Dr Kolobova explained.
‘Another group member, possibly with experience in fine stone tool production, used a small perforator to carefully drill into the tooth.
‘This was not a sterile operating room, but it was a deliberate, goal–oriented act. The mouth is a difficult space to work in; you need good manual dexterity, patience, and a helper who can hold the head still. I think this happened within a close social bond, possibly between family members.’
The operation would likely have been carried out by a tool made of local jasper – a vibrant type of quartz found in the area – and without any kind of anaesthetic. The ‘dentist’ would have carefully twisted the stone into the tooth to make the deep hole.
This procedure would have hurt, but it would also have ultimately alleviated the pain of a tooth infection by removing the damaged part of the tooth, the researchers said. It predates the oldest known example of such behaviour by more than 40,000 years.
Tools such as this (left) were found in the cave. The experts said they may have been used for the dental surgery.
The tooth was found in the Chagyrskaya Cave in Russia (pictured). It marks the world’s oldest evidence of successful dental treatment
The researchers said their findings suggest Neanderthals treated their sick and weak no differently than modern humans did
‘The damage documented on the Neanderthal tooth from Chagyrskaya Cave in Siberia points not only to intentional pulp removal but also to antemortem wear – wear that could only have developed if the individual kept using the tooth while alive,’ the researchers said.
The archaeologists said the Neanderthal ‘dentist’ who carried out the operation did so in several stages.
This indicates that their cognitive abilities were ‘remarkably advanced’ and, in this respect, comparable to those of Homo sapiens of the time.
‘We have known for a very long time that Neanderthals cared for the sick and weak among them,’ author Dr Alisa Zubova said.
‘At many other sites, researchers have found bone fragments showing well–healed severe injuries and signs of diseases that, whether in the long or short term, would have made normal life difficult or impossible.
‘Similar cases have also been found for fossils of Homo sapiens.
‘Yet because Neanderthals were long viewed as a more primitive branch of the human family, care for community members during the Middle Paleolithic has been, and continues to be, regarded as something exceptional.
‘But as the evidence mounts, it increasingly suggests that Neanderthals treated their sick and weak no differently than modern humans did.’
This cross section shows the area where the tooth (depicted in yellow) was found in the Chagyrskaya Cave
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Lydia Zotkina, who also worked on the study, said: ‘What struck me, and continues to strike me, is what an incredibly strong–willed person this Neanderthal must have been.
‘He must have surely understood that although the pain of the procedure was greater than the pain of the inflammation, it was only temporary and had to be endured.
‘To me, this is a stunning example of how archaeological evidence can allow us not just to glimpse a single aspect of past people’s lives, but to actually understand what these individuals were like – strong and resilient.
‘Now, every time I go to the dentist, I think about that guy.’



