Pre-Neanderthal humans transformed bones into tools when stone proved inadequate
ROME -- Long before the Colosseum or the Roman Forum, before Julius Caesar or the Republic, Rome was home to a different kind of human innovation. Around 400,000 years ago, in what is now the northwest corner of Italy's capital city, pre-Neanderthal humans encountered an elephant carcass and demonstrated a level of resourcefulness that would make modern zero-waste advocates look wasteful by comparison.
A study published in PLOS One reveals that at a site called Casal Lumbroso, ancient humans didn't just butcher massive straight-tusked elephants for meat. They transformed the animal's skeleton into the tools needed to process it, creating evidence of nearly complete carcass exploitation. Meat for sustenance, marrow for nutrition, bones for implements. Almost nothing was left unused, though some elements like the massive skull may have been processed elsewhere.
"The elephant carcass was probably exploited not only as a food source, but also as a source of raw material," write researchers from Sapienza University of Rome and Italy's National Research Council, who excavated the site between 2017 and 2023.
How Pre-Neanderthals Made Bone Tools from Elephant Skeletons
The elephant at Casal Lumbroso, identified as Palaeoloxodon antiquus, was an adult between 45 and 49 years old when it died on or near the bed of a small stream. Whether the elephant died naturally or was deliberately driven into a mud trap by humans remains unknown, but what happened next is clear: a group of humans exploited the opportunity.
Rome's territory during this period, known as Marine Isotope Stage 11c, bore no resemblance to today's urban sprawl. Analysis of the elephant's tooth enamel reveals the animal grazed in humid, forested environments, feeding exclusively on plants typical of woodlands. Deer roamed the area alongside rhinoceroses, bovines, and wolves. The climate was among the warmest and most stable of any period in the last 800,000 years.
Into this landscape came humans carrying small flint pebbles collected from nearby outcrops -- raw material typically measuring 60 by 45 by 35 millimeters. These source stones could be knapped into sharp flakes perfect for cutting meat and scraping hide. The archaeological record at Casal Lumbroso includes 542 stone artifacts, with 62% of the resulting tools qualifying as "small tools" between 5 and 30 millimeters in size.
But when it came to breaking apart the elephant's massive bones to extract marrow, or performing heavy-duty butchery tasks, these small stone implements had limitations. The solution lay at their feet.
Sixteen elephant bone fragments recovered from Casal Lumbroso -- 13 from long bones and three from ribs -- show evidence of fresh bone fracture. Crucially, thirteen of these bear impact marks where they were struck to break them apart, providing unequivocal evidence of human activity rather than natural breakage. Fifteen fragments show use-wear traces concentrated on pointed tips or edges, indicating they were wielded to work other materials.
These bone tools measured 10 to 36 centimeters on average, substantially larger than most stone tools at the site. One rib fragment with use-wear traces stretched 77 centimeters long. Two elephant bones even show evidence of having been shaped through knapping, with flakes deliberately removed to create more refined edges.
The bone tools filled a crucial gap in the prehistoric toolkit. A single limestone hand axe found about 15 meters from the elephant was larger than most stone tools at the site, though still smaller than many of the bone implements. Otherwise, the bone tools represented the only large, robust implements available for heavy-duty work. When small local pebbles couldn't provide the heft needed for certain tasks, elephant bones offered an immediate alternative, creating a feedback loop of efficiency: use the elephant's skeleton to more effectively process the elephant's carcass.
Stone Tool Workshop Discovered at 400,000-Year-Old Butchery Site
Evidence points to much of the tool-making happening at the site itself. Small stone chips indicative of tool manufacture were found alongside the bones. The predominant technique was bipolar-on-anvil knapping, where a stone is placed on a hard surface and struck from above, ideal for working with small pebbles and producing sharp-edged flakes.
Use-wear analysis of 22 well-preserved stone tools revealed they were used primarily for scraping and cutting soft to soft-medium materials, activities consistent with butchering. Ancient residues that might have identified the specific materials being worked had not survived.
The pattern of elephant bones at Casal Lumbroso tells its own story about systematic processing. Long bone fragments dominate the assemblage, virtually all showing evidence of having been broken open, presumably for marrow extraction. Cranial elements are notably scarce, possibly indicating the massive skull (which contains substantial fat deposits) was removed for processing elsewhere.
Only two bones show carnivore tooth marks, indicating the carcass was covered by sediment relatively quickly after humans finished their work, before scavengers could access it.
Multiple Elephant Butchery Sites Reveal Ancient Roman Survival Strategy
Casal Lumbroso fits into a broader pattern of elephant exploitation sites around ancient Rome. The northwest sector of the modern city has yielded multiple Middle Pleistocene locations where humans processed elephant carcasses, including the well-known sites of Castel di Guido and La Polledrara di Cecanibbio.
All date to roughly 430,000 to 300,000 years ago and share remarkably similar characteristics: small stone tools made from local pebbles, bone tools crafted from elephant remains, and evidence of thorough carcass processing. The consistency indicates pre-Neanderthal populations in the region developed a reliable, repeatable strategy for maximizing elephant carcasses when they became available.
The timing wasn't coincidental. During warm interglacial periods like MIS 11c, the area's mild climate and reliable water sources would have attracted elephants, and opportunistic humans would have known to monitor these locations. Elephants occasionally became trapped in muddy swamps, creating predictable opportunities for human groups to access massive quantities of resources.
Dating of Casal Lumbroso comes from volcanic ash layers that sandwich the archaeological horizon. Geochemical analysis linked these layers to eruptions of the Vico volcano around 414,800 and 406,500 years ago, placing the elephant butchery event at approximately 404,000 years ago.
Prehistoric Innovation in Rome's Territory
What emerges from Casal Lumbroso is a picture of humans who approached large animal carcasses with a fascinating completeness. Every component of the elephant had value: meat for immediate consumption, marrow for calorie-dense nutrition, bones for tool manufacture.
This wasn't opportunistic scavenging or simple butchery. It was planned, systematic exploitation that demonstrates cognitive complexity and technological flexibility. When existing tools proved inadequate for certain tasks, these humans could assess alternative materials in their immediate environment and modify them to suit their needs.
The seasonal timing adds another layer to the story. Deer antler fragments at the site were all shed naturally rather than attached to skulls. Since fallow deer, red deer, and roe deer shed their antlers between late winter and early summer, with peaks in spring, the site's primary use likely occurred around late spring.
In the territory that would eventually become Rome, 400,000 years ago, humans were already demonstrating the innovation and resourcefulness that would characterize the region's later inhabitants. The difference is that these ancient residents measured their success not in monuments or conquests, but in the ability to extract every possible benefit from an elephant carcass lying in a streambed.