A Mysterious 25,000-Year-Old Hut Built Out of Mammoth Bones

A Mysterious 25,000-year-old hut built out of mammoth bones

Dr. Alexander J.E. Pryor, an archeological postdoctoral researcher at Southampton University, has recently published a research paper from Cambridge University Press.

The members of his team claim they have found the oldest man-made structure in Russia about three hundred miles from Moscow. No one knows for certain why it was built.

Kostenki 11 is a large bone circle built during the Upper Paleolithic era, over 40,000 years ago. It’s located within the Kostyonki–Borshchyovo archaeological complex in the Khokholsky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia.

Hut Built Out of Mammoth Bones
Close-up of the structure, featuring long bones, a lower jaw (top middle) and articulated vertebrae.

The majority of the bones in the circle and the remnants of a bone hut were made from woolly mammoths, but bones from Arctic foxes, reindeer, bears, wolves, and horses have also been found, the findings were published in the journal Antiquity.

The archaeological site was discovered in 1951, but little work was done there until the 1960s when the first bone circle was discovered.

In 1970, another mammoth bone structure and a pit were discovered about sixty feet from the circle. Another five feet away is the newly discovered bone hut that is about forty-one feet in diameter and sits on a gradual slope.

The circle has no break for an entrance, but just outside are three small pits where burnt bones, ivory, and charcoal were found. They were carbon-dated to around twenty-five thousand years old.

Some scientists believe the shelter may have been covered with animal skins, but Dr. Pryor does not believe it was a living abode as all of the common artifacts usually found among dwellings were absent.

Hut Built Out of Mammoth Bones
Dwelling made with mammoth bones. Reconstruction is based on the example of Mezhirich. Exhibit in the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, Japan

According to The Independent, some researchers have suggested structures such as this might have been ritual monuments.

There is, however, no evidence for this conclusion. Another factor is that some of the bones were still stuck together indicating there was still animal material on them when they were stacked.

This would have been not only smelly but very dangerous, as it would attract predators.

Circular bone features such as this have been found in about twenty-five different locations in the Ukraine and Russia but none are as old as Kostenki 11, which is still being studied.

Built at the end of the last ice age when winters were long and harsh, reaching twenty degrees below zero on average, by the humans that didn’t travel south to escape the cold, Dr. Pryor believes the hut may have been used for food storage, as a garbage dump that would keep scavengers away from their living area, or even for rituals of some sort.

Hut Built Out of Mammoth Bones
The mammoth bone structure was discovered.

Evidence of tool usage including percussion rocks and striking platforms were found as well as over fifty small seeds that had been partially burned leading researchers to wonder if they were from native plants growing around the area or from plants that had been collected and brought to the site for consumption.

Three other pits in the same area tested exactly the same as the materials found at the bone hut according to Dr. Pryor’s research paper on Cambridge Core.

Dr. Pryor stated that Kostenki 11 is a rare site where scientists can learn more about hunter-gatherers in the Paleolithic era and how they survived in such a harsh climate, the height of the last ice age.

Hut Built Out of Mammoth Bones
The Mammoth Bones structure seen above

The site is providing information as to what places like this may have been used for. He notes that the people of that time used ingenuity in finding ways to survive using the materials available in their ice-age environment.

Dr. E. James Dixon, emeritus professor of anthropology at the University of New Mexico, is quoted by smithsonianmag.com saying that this is a “fascinating time period in Eurasian archaeology” and the study “clearly demonstrates that modern humans were adapted to higher laтιтudes at the very height of the last ice age.”

Related Posts

Adivino – The Pyramid of the Magician at Uxmal: A Journey Through Time and Restoration

In the heart of the Yucatán Peninsula, nestled within the ancient Maya city of Uxmal, stands one of Mesoamerica’s most enigmatic and visually striking structures — the…

Voices Beneath the Stone – The Public Latrines of Ancient Rome and the Civilization That Sat Together

Among the ruins of the ancient Roman Empire, scattered across the Mediterranean world from Britain to North Africa, one might stumble upon a peculiar yet profoundly human…

Kumbhalgarh Fort: A Legendary Journey Through Time

In the heart of Rajasthan’s mystical Aravalli Hills, where ancient winds whisper tales of valor and grandeur, rises one of India’s most magnificent fortresses—Kumbhalgarh Fort. This architectural…

The Giants of the Past – Tracing the Mystery of Ancient Human Bones

In a quiet corner of a small museum, a display captures the imagination of every visitor who walks by—a colossal femur bone towering beside the leg of…

Faşiller Stone Monument: A Sleeping Hitтιтe Heritage

Hidden on a steep rocky mountainside in southeastern Anatolia, a monumental ancient carving that has stood for thousands of years quietly tells the story of one of…

Göbekli Tepe: The Amazing Honeycomb Stone Temple

Göbekli Tepe is one of the most important and groundbreaking archaeological discoveries of the 21st century, completely changing the way we understand the origins of civilization. Located…