ABOUT US
Study: Humans have been sleeping on beds for 200,000 years
by Brooks Hays
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 14, 2020

For nearly as long as modern humans have been roaming the earth, they've been sleeping in beds, according to research published Friday in the journal Science.

Archaeologists have uncovered 200,000-year-old evidence of grass bedding inside South Africa's Border Cave.

At the back of the cave, located in the KwaZulu-Natal region of South Africa, researchers found layers of leaves belonging to Panicoideae, a large subfamily of grasses, stacked atop a layer of ash, which humans used to protect themselves from crawling insects.

"We speculate that laying grass bedding on ash was a deliberate strategy, not only to create a dirt-free, insulated base for the bedding, but also to repel crawling insects," lead study author Lyn Wadley, professor of archaeology at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, said in a news release.

"Sometimes the ashy foundation of the bedding was a remnant of older grass bedding that had been burned to clean the cave and destroy pests," Wadley said. "On other occasions, wood ash from fireplaces was also used as the clean surface for a new bedding layer."

Because insects have trouble moving through fine powder, ash helped protect slumbering humans from the bites of insects. Atop the ash and grass bedding, researchers also found remnants of camphor bush, a plant that's still used as an insect repellant.

"We know that people worked as well as slept on the grass surface because the debris from stone tool manufacture is mixed with the grass remains," Wadley said. "Also, many tiny, rounded grains of red and orange ochre were found in the bedding where they may have rubbed off human skin or colored objects."

Previous studies have revealed dozens of stack fireplaces throughout the Border Cave complex, dating from 200,000 and 38,000 years ago. In addition to rituals, early humans slept and performed daily work near fires.

Modern humans, Homo sapiens, first emerged in Africa around 300,000 years ago. It didn't take long for them to adapt strategies for saying safe and comfortable in dangerous environs.

"Our research shows that before 200,000 years ago, close to the origin of our species, people could produce fire at will, and they used fire, ash, and medicinal plants to maintain clean, pest-free camps," Wadley said. "Such strategies would have had health benefits that advantaged these early communities."


Related Links
All About Human Beings and How We Got To Be Here

ABOUT US
'Invisible' words reveal common structure among stories
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 07, 2020
Storytelling requires a narrative arc, but the trajectory of a dramatic arc isn't always obvious. By tracing the abundance of "invisible" words - pronouns, articles and other short words - researchers were able to identify patterns shared by a diversity of stories, from Shakespeare to Spielberg, according to a study published Friday in Science Advances. "Over the years, these 'invisible' words have been found to be related to a whole mess of psychological processes - how people use sm ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

ABOUT US
Yemen's heritage battered first by bombs, then floods

US braces for evictions crisis as aid talks stall in Washington

Greek town of Preveza bets on slow tourism to overcome virus

China promotes its 'heroic' battle against virus in new exhibition

ABOUT US
PredaSAR chooses SpaceX to launch its first synthetic aperture radar satellite

'Fortnite' maker sues Apple over app restrictions

Digital content to total half Earth's mass by 2245

French firm thrusts Microsoft Flight Simulator to new take-off

ABOUT US
US to ease water rules after Trump's shower moan

Venice nurtures its lagoon back to health

Florida Current study confirms decline in strength of Gulf Stream

Sudan says Nile dam talks delayed for 'consultations'

ABOUT US
Discovering new penguin colonies from space

CryoSat taken to new heights for ice science

Italian valley still in 'red zone' as Mont Blanc glacier threatens collapse

Glaciers in New Zealand's Southern Alps more than half-gone

ABOUT US
WHO says food safe from coronavirus

Business booming for Brazil farmers but deforestation looms large

Chinese diners told to order less and cut food waste

An irresistible scent makes locusts swarm, study finds

ABOUT US
Flight warning as Indonesia's Mt Sinabung erupts again

33 dead in Niger floods

More than 170 dead in Yemen floods

Indonesia's Mt. Sinabung blasts tower of smoke and ash into sky

ABOUT US
Niger attack raises stakes for French forces in West Africa

'Icon': Chad president named a marshal for independence day

Niger wrestles with security challenges ahead of presidential election

Murder mystery challenges Togo's hardline government

ABOUT US
Humans have been cremating the dead since at least 7,000 B.C.

Primate voice boxes are bigger, evolve at a faster pace, study says

'Invisible' words reveal common structure among stories

To read, humans 'recycled' a brain region meant for recognizing objects