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Divje Babe Flute : ウィキペディア英語版
Divje Babe Flute

The Divje Babe Flute is a cave bear femur pierced by spaced holes that was found in 1995 at the Divje Babe archeological park located near Cerkno in northwestern Slovenia. It has been suggested that it was made by Neanderthals as a form of musical instrument, its hole spacing and alignment leading to its being labeled a "Neanderthal flute". Slovenian archeologist Mitja Brodar, however, argues that it was made by Cro-Magnons as an element of Central European Aurignacian culture.
If it is a form of flute, it is possibly the world's oldest known musical instrument. Alternative hypotheses notwithstanding,〔D'Errico 1998〕〔Holderman and Serangeli 1999〕〔Chase and Nowell 1998, 2003〕 the artifact remains on prominent public display as a flute in the National Museum of Slovenia (Narodni Muzej Slovenije) in Ljubljana. The museum's visitor leaflet maintains that manufacture by Neanderthals "is reliably proven".〔''The flute from Divje Babe'', National Museum of Slovenia, 2005〕
==Site and similar findings in Slovenia==

Divje Babe is the oldest known archaeological site in Slovenia. The site is the location of a horizontal cave, long and up to wide. It is located 230m above the Idrijca River, near Cerkno, and is accessible to visitors. Researchers working at this site have uncovered more than 600 archaeological finds in at least ten levels, including 20 hearths〔Turk, 2003〕 and the skeletal remains of cave bears, and have studied climate change during the pleistocene.〔Yu 2001〕 According to the museum, the presumed flute has been associated with the "end of the middle Pleistocene" and the time of Neanderthals, about 55,000 years ago.〔
This is not the only such site in Slovenia. In the 1920s and 1930s, the archeologist Srečko Brodar discovered tens of bones with holes in another site, Potok Cave ((スロベニア語:Potočka zijalka)) in the Eastern Karavanke, but almost all of them were destroyed during Italian occupation of Ljubljana in World War II. The best known of them, still preserved, is a mandible of a cave bear with three holes in the mandibular canal.
Since World War II, specimens have also been found in Mokrica Cave ((スロベニア語:Mokriška jama)), Betal Rock Shelter (), and elsewhere. These bones are preserved today at the National History Museum of Slovenia in Ljubljana, the capital. According to the archeologist who discovered many of them, Mitja Brodar, bones with holes were never found in the Western Europe, and they have been dated only to the end of the Mousterian and the beginning of the Aurignacian. Such bones were discovered also elsewhere in Central Europe, but in a much lower number, and it is unlikely that cave bears would make such holes only in Central Europe and only in a specific period. That these bones are still not recognised by international research community Mitja Brodar attributes to the fact that most of the bones were found on the territory of France and the Paleolithic is still considered to be the French domain, although not a single bone with holes have been found there. The only bone point with a hole ever discovered was found in Potok Cave. According to Brodar, such holes are an element of Central European Aurignacian.〔 They have been ascribed to the Cro-Magnon, modern human. According to Brodar, the Divje Babe Flute is a product of modern humans as well, but this has been disputed by other Slovene scholars.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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