Schweitzer Fachinformationen
Wenn es um professionelles Wissen geht, ist Schweitzer Fachinformationen wegweisend. Kunden aus Recht und Beratung sowie Unternehmen, öffentliche Verwaltungen und Bibliotheken erhalten komplette Lösungen zum Beschaffen, Verwalten und Nutzen von digitalen und gedruckten Medien.
In old Neanderthal caves there's something uncertain about the smell of earth and flint. It is decaying, dry and damp at the same time, a bit like the smell of broken spring soil; a place where the living and the dead grow out of each other and can thus give voice.
Something almost unpleasant, but something that still makes you want to smell it again, to come back to it. As if to remember that scent, quite unlike anything else. Is it the scent of millennia? From all the cooking, the rotting, the infinite amount of stuff left behind, emitting this little whiff of sourness? All those bones, that bone dust, that humus of meat. Those thousands of generations of love; those thousands of generations of death.
I don't know. Maybe those smells aren't so old, when you think about it. Maybe they just indicate recent putrefaction, all those bacterial decompositions, those mosses, those algae and all the modest life of cave floors? There are things happening in these soils. There is nothing inert about them: they continue their small lives, quietly, at their microbial pace. These invisible lives are all around us.
But, for some time now, there is something else. It's no longer the familiar harsh little smell that invades my olfactory space when I dig around in the ancient Neanderthal soils.
Something else haunts these places.
Regularly, or rather just occasionally, powerful smells of grilling emerge from the soils I'm digging in. It's . how can I put it? - like fire, burning, ash, coal. No. No. It's not really that. It's stronger, more intoxicating. Like . Like a gamey aroma. Yes, that's it, grilled flesh, charred game, burnt fat. Yes, a powerful smell of grilled game. The smell seems to emerge from the ground so strongly that, for a moment, the air is almost unbreathable. And the smells vary from place to place and with the depth of my digging. Here, there's something soft, almost subtle, about it: but a few days later, in a different area of the cave and in older soils, the smell of charred flesh is so strong that for short moments I stop digging. I breathe it in, trying to find where these incredible aromas come from. How on earth? We are on archaeological soils that are more than fifty-five millennia old. What's going on with these prehistoric odours? Neanderthal smells. It makes no sense. And yet, they're here, powerful, obvious, unavoidable - and I don't know what it means. No one has ever reported smells from the age-old depths of caves. But these smells suddenly permeate the entire space, without warning, and disappear just as quickly. But they're certainly here. I can't pretend otherwise. I can't deny them. Something has survived and still haunts these places. Something still breathes this life of yesteryear, and one's nose isn't mistaken. It seems insane, but we have to deal with it. That's how it is. Odours clearly linked to the activities of Neanderthal populations have transgressed time, inviting themselves to gather around us tens of millennia later.
But these conclusions, this awareness, became clear to me only in 2006. I'd already been searching tirelessly in caves, three to four months a year, for almost fifteen years. Fifteen years of smelling without understanding and, more importantly, without accepting the facts. In fact, I think my senses perceived it, that's clear enough; but the impossibility of the situation stopped me from becoming fully aware of an objective reality. That's the whole problem in science. We do science only when we take a step into the unknown. When we agree to consider a possibility that doesn't seem reasonable. When we consider a solution that instinctively seems a little ridiculous. But doing science isn't dressing up in a white coat and running computers to crack infinite equations. In the first instance, doing science is considering the improbable. The instinctively ridiculous. And taking this leap into the void. And the problem is the way we rely on a parachute. On all the unconscious presuppositions that muffle our thinking, bringing it delicately back down into our comfort zones. The leap into the unknown isn't just painful; it's a fight against ourselves, against the countless filters that frame us, supervise us, police us, prevent us from thinking in real freedom; prevent us for fifteen years from understanding that it smells like . grilled game, for heaven's sake! That it smells horribly like game. The brain filters things, brings us back to the familiar. Always. Back to the possible. Back to the reasonable, the reassuring. I thought I was free. We always think we're free, in general. But we're always prisoners of ourselves. However, we have to take it, sometimes - this risky step into the unknown. Accepting this transgression should constitute the first lesson of scientific thought. Learning to free ourselves, to reject our logic. No longer to reject the impossible. To revise, at each step, the field of possibilities that frames us. To love doubt. Do you want to know what a true scientific discovery is? Well, it's understanding something that seems impossible to us. More precisely, it's the demonstration that something that seems a bit ridiculous, a bit laughable, is a reality. If the discovery doesn't rub up against common sense, doesn't chip away at it, you can be sure that the discovery is of very secondary importance. It doesn't constitute a step. A crossing. If you transgress the common notion of reality, if the idea seems so ridiculous that you'd hardly dare to put it in words, then you're touching on science. You've taken this step, this transgression towards the unknown. But, by definition, consciousness and common sense block information. They block any truly free thought. Don't you forget it!
And then comes the slap in the face. At a certain point, the unconscious establishes connections. Serial connections. Calculations. Equations of which we have absolutely no perception and which, at the least expected moment, hand over the answer to consciousness. We don't know why the answer arrives at this precise moment. And we don't know why it took so long to express itself.
I remember that moment very precisely.
I was knees in the dirt, as usual; I got up, I picked up my bucket of fifty-thousand-year-old sand and I left the cave. I suddenly had a conviction that was both improbable and overwhelming, like the tunes you hear in the morning that cling to you, turn into ear-worms, going endlessly round and round. You see? I had to check. I had to test this strange conviction, this nagging idea. I sifted through these prehistoric sands, as usual, to be sure I hadn't missed a bit of flint or a little piece of bone when digging through the archaeological soil. But, instead of throwing away the little stones, I kept them. I broke them open. I brought them up to my nose. I breathed them in. With each crack, with each rupture of the surfaces, an explosion of smells. The scents weren't in the soil, they were frozen in the stone. These stones are fragments of the ancient vault of the cavern. They have fossilized all the soot deposited on the walls when the Neanderthals lit their fires in the cave. And, what I have before my eyes, after breaking my stones, is a real barcode of blacks and whites: the black of the soot, the white of the calcite concretions that cover them and fossilize them. They're there, my smells, trapped in the stone, like an immaterial fossil. The fossil of past breaths.
It would take us more than ten years to get these black and white edges to speak but, from 2006 onwards, we had a gut feeling, a certainty, that we would be able to transgress time.1
It didn't look like much, of course, I hadn't just discovered the Sistine Chapel or Tutankhamun's tomb, true - but these little pebbles would be one of the keys to rethinking the encounter between Neanderthals and that damned Sapiens.
Because, on these pebbles, it wasn't just the smell that had been trapped. It was time.
When we archaeologists dig, we have no notion of time. No idea of the precise age of the flint object that we've just extracted from the earth. We measure, we date, using the formidable tool of carbon 14. Suddenly, we know that the last Neanderthal is forty-two thousand years old. We also know that the first Sapiens on this same territory is, likewise, forty-two thousand years old. But Neanderthal and Sapiens exist in time loops where the uncertainty factor is more or less one thousand years.
My little stones, my barcodes, would enable us to perceive real time, and no longer the time of physicists - they would mean we could, year after year, watch the seasons passing. The calcite gradually deposits itself on the walls, a thin layer in the dry season, a thin layer in the wet season and, for the first time there are human traces, trapped between these thin layers of stone. We could finally look at time and finally analyse Neanderthals in their temporal reality, in six-month steps. We'd probably never do any better than this astonishingly high degree of resolution, unless we invented the time machine. This wonderful scientific advance, fuliginochronology (from Latin...
Dateiformat: ePUBKopierschutz: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
Systemvoraussetzungen:
Das Dateiformat ePUB ist sehr gut für Romane und Sachbücher geeignet – also für „fließenden” Text ohne komplexes Layout. Bei E-Readern oder Smartphones passt sich der Zeilen- und Seitenumbruch automatisch den kleinen Displays an. Mit Adobe-DRM wird hier ein „harter” Kopierschutz verwendet. Wenn die notwendigen Voraussetzungen nicht vorliegen, können Sie das E-Book leider nicht öffnen. Daher müssen Sie bereits vor dem Download Ihre Lese-Hardware vorbereiten.Bitte beachten Sie: Wir empfehlen Ihnen unbedingt nach Installation der Lese-Software diese mit Ihrer persönlichen Adobe-ID zu autorisieren!
Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unserer E-Book Hilfe.