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Two researchers report finding two perforated snail shells unearthed in the 1930s in what is now Israel.
Two researchers report finding two perforated snail shells unearthed in the 1930s in what is now Israel. (Courtesy Of Marian Vanhaeren And Francesco D'errico)
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Monday, June 26, 2006

Archaeologists searching through artifacts unearthed long ago have found what they believe are three ornamental marine snail-shell beads that are about 100,000 years old, the oldest known evidence of personal decoration.

Archaeologist Marian Vanhaeren of University College London said she and Francesco d'Errico of France's Institute of Prehistory and Quaternary Geology found the shells while searching for evidence to bolster earlier claims that beads found in Blombos cave in South Africa were 75,000 years old. Vanhaeren said she and d'Errico worked in Blombos.

Until Blombos, Vanhaeren said in a telephone interview, "there was the prevailing view that humans became culturally modern only when they invaded Europe 40,000 years ago." The Blombos findings have been hotly disputed.

Reporting last week in the journal Science, the two researchers said they had found two perforated snail shells that had been excavated in the 1930s at Es-Skhul, in what is now Israel, and another dug from Oued Djebbana, in Algeria, in the 1940s.

Vanhaeren said all three shells were found with the remains of anatomically modern humans, and both sites were far from shore, indicating that whoever carried them inland had done so deliberately, with the intention of stringing them in an ornament.

Vanhaeren said the shells were from the same genus of marine gastropod as the Blombos shells and had the same sort of holes punched in them. Such holes are almost impossible to find in nature today among such shells, she said.

The results are certain to remain controversial, because there is no evidence of any human ornamental or artistic design between the beads and bone carvings from Europe beginning 40,000 years ago and those from Blombos, 35,000 years earlier and thousands of miles away.

-- Guy Gugliotta

Trees Elected and Reelected, Too

It may not be as closely watched as the biennial congressional elections. But every two years in the United States, hundreds of trees are elected or reelected to the National Register of Big Trees -- a carefully judged contest that brings a modicum of fame to the single biggest representative of almost every American species of tree.

The 870 winners, announced last week by American Forests, a District-based group that has coordinated the registry since 1940, includes 119 newly elected winners. Candidates are typically nominated by local people who believe that a tree they know of may be the biggest of its kind. Winners are verified by state coordinators using a system that takes into account height, circumference at shoulder height and total crown spread.

The General Sherman giant sequoia in California continues its reign as the largest tree of all. It is one of three that have held their titles since 1940. The General is 274 feet tall with an 85-foot circumference and a 107-foot crown spread.

The smallest largest member of its species is a 16-foot-tall corkwood tree in Florida.


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