ScienceJanuary 6, 2026

New Evidence About Neanderthals: Colour, Diet, Touch

Key Vocabulary

ochre
/ˈoʊ.kər/ a natural brown, red, or yellow pigment made from mineral, used for colouring
"They used red ochre to make marks on stone."
crayon
/ˈkreɪ.ɒn/ a stick of coloured material used for drawing
"The shaped ochre looked like an old crayon."
maggot
/ˈmæɡ.ət/ a fly larva, the small soft body that eats decaying meat
"Maggots were found on old animal carcasses."

Listening

New Evidence About Neanderthals: Colour, Diet, Touch

Researchers found pieces of red and yellow ochre that Neanderthals shaped like crayons. These ochre pieces come from rock shelters in Crimea, a peninsula in Ukraine. The scientists say the pieces were sharpened and used to make marks on surfaces, so they may show symbolic behavior.

Other studies show Neanderthals ate a wide range of foods. One study found that fly larvae, or maggots, are very high in heavy nitrogen and could change isotope results in bones. Scientists also argue that Neanderthals likely kissed and that Neanderthals and modern humans sometimes mixed by interbreeding in the past. These discoveries change how we think about Neanderthal lives.

106 words

Quiz

1. Where did the ochre pieces come from?
2. What is another name for fly larvae?
3. How did Neanderthals and modern humans sometimes mix?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you like drawing or colouring? Have you ever used crayons on different surfaces?

2

Have you ever tried a food that you later learned had an unexpected ingredient? How did you feel?

3

What do you think when you hear that ancient people may have kissed like us?

此内容仅供英语学习使用,不保证事实的准确性。