Bones and Ochre: The Curious Afterlife of the Red Lady of Paviland

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, 2007 - History - 398 pages

Marianne Sommer unravels a riveting tale about a set of ancient human bones and their curious afterlife as a scientific object.

When the ochre-stained bones were unearthed in a Welsh cave in 1823, they inspired unsettling questions regarding their origin. Their discoverer, William Buckland, declared the remains to be Post-Diluvian, possibly those of a taxman murdered by smugglers. Shortly thereafter he reinterpreted the bones as those of a female fortune-teller in Roman Britain--and so began the casting and recasting of the Red Lady. Anthropologist William Sollas re-excavated Paviland Cave, applying methods and theories not available to Buckland some ninety years earlier, and concluded that the skeleton was male and Cro-Magnon. Recently, an interdisciplinary team excavated the cave and reinterpreted its contents. Despite their "definitive report" in 2000, Sommer suggests this latest project still hasn't solved the mystery of the Red Lady. Rather, the Red Lady, now a shaman and icon of Welsh ancient history, continues to be implicated in questions of scientific and political authority.

The biography of the Red Lady reflects the personal, professional, and national ambitions of those who studied her and echoes the era in which the research was conducted. In Bones and Ochre, Sommer reveals how paleoanthropology has emerged as an international, interdisciplinary, modern science.

 

Contents

William Buckland an Ancient British Witch and
21
William Sollas a CroMagnon Man and Issues
121
An Interdisciplinary Team an Early Upper Paleolithic
219
An Unfinished Life
279
Archeological and Geological Series
293
Notes
299
References
353
Index
391
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

Marianne Sommer is a historian of science at ETH Zurich, Switzerland.

Bibliographic information