Tens of thousands of years before the first cities, before writing, before bronze — a small population of modern humans spreading across Ice Age Europe began doing something no one on the continent had done before. They carved bone into figurines, pierced shells for jewelry, blew notes through hollow bird bones, and left paintings on the walls of caves that still astonish us today. This was the Aurignacian, and it marks the opening chapter of modern human culture in Europe.
Key findings
- Aurignacian culture: The culture spanned roughly 43,000 to 26,000 B.C.E. across most of Europe, with a late form persisting in Ukraine until approximately 17,000 B.C.E. — making it one of the longest-running cultural traditions in human prehistory.
- Upper Paleolithic art: Some of the oldest known figurative art in Europe dates to this period, including the Lion-man of Hohlenstein-Stadel (~40,000 B.C.E.) and the Venus of Hohle Fels (~35,000–40,000 B.C.E.), both found in Germany’s Swabian Alb.
- Bone flute: The Hohle Fels flute, carved from a vulture wing bone and perforated with five finger holes, dates to approximately 35,000–40,000 B.C.E. and is considered the oldest undisputed musical instrument yet discovered.
Who the Aurignacians were
The Aurignacians were anatomically modern humans — Homo sapiens — who had migrated out of Africa through the Near East and into Europe, where they became known to later researchers as Cro-Magnons. They arrived in a landscape already occupied by Neanderthals, whose Mousterian tool tradition had prevailed for hundreds of thousands of years.
The population was remarkably small. A 2019 demographic analysis estimated a mean of just 1,500 people in western and central Europe during the height of the Aurignacian period — with an upper limit of around 3,300. By any modern standard, this was a tiny group. That people so few left such a durable cultural signature is one of the more remarkable facts in the archaeological record.
Their roots were not purely European. A closely related Levantine Aurignacian culture had already developed in the Near East, and the relationship between the two traditions remains a subject of active scholarly debate — it is unclear whether Europe influenced the Levant, or the reverse, or both. This ambiguity is a reminder that cultural origins are rarely clean lines.
What they made and how they lived
Aurignacian tool technology represented a genuine leap from what came before. Where Neanderthals used mode 3 Mousterian flake tools, Aurignacians worked with mode 4 blade technology — fine blades and bladelets struck from carefully prepared stone cores. They also used bone and antler in ways their predecessors had not, shaping them into pointed tools with grooved bases and what researchers believe were spear-throwers.
Their diet was broad and adaptive. Large game — mammoth, rhinoceros, horse, reindeer — formed the bulk of their calories, but evidence suggests they ate more plants, fish, and birds than Neanderthals typically did. Settlement patterns varied by region, shaped by local terrain and seasonal migrations of prey.
Trade — or at least long-distance exchange — was already underway. Shell ornaments at sites in Lower Austria have been traced to either the Mediterranean or the Black Sea, some 300 to 600 kilometers away. Stone materials in Moravian and southern German sites came from sources 50 to more than 200 kilometers distant. These are not isolated communities. They are networked ones.
The art and what it tells us
The art the Aurignacians left behind is what makes this period feel immediately alive across 40,000 years of distance.
The Lion-man of Hohlenstein-Stadel — a figure with a human body and a lion’s head, carved from mammoth ivory — is the oldest known anthropomorphic animal figurine in the world. It represents something beyond decoration: a mind capable of imagining what does not exist. The Venus of Hohle Fels, carved with deliberate emphasis on fertility-associated features, is the oldest undisputed depiction of a human being in prehistoric art. The animal engravings at Trois Frères and the paintings at Chauvet Cave in southern France — horses, rhinos, cave lions rendered with fluid, confident lines — belong to this same tradition.
Many dozens of tiny ivory figurines, including six mammoth and horse figures, were recovered from Vogelherd Cave in Germany. One of the horses, researchers noted, was carved with a skill equal to anything produced in the Upper Paleolithic. These were not crude first attempts. They were the work of practiced hands in a practiced tradition.
Music, too. The Hohle Fels flute — five finger holes, carved from the wing bone of a griffon vulture — could produce a range of notes. It is the oldest confirmed instrument we have found. Whether it was played around fires, in ceremony, or simply for pleasure, we cannot say. But it was played.
Lasting impact
The Aurignacian set the template for everything that followed in European prehistory. The Gravettian, Solutrean, and Magdalenian cultures — stretching across the Last Glacial Maximum and beyond — all built on the symbolic, technological, and social foundations the Aurignacians established.
More broadly, the Aurignacian is our clearest evidence that the behavioral and cognitive capacities we associate with modern humanity — art, music, long-distance exchange, symbolic representation, possibly religion — were present and active in Homo sapiens from the earliest moments of their spread into Europe. The Lion-man is not a curiosity from an early and simple people. It is evidence of a fully modern mind.
The culture also tells us something about resilience. A mean population of 1,500 people, spread across a continent, through Ice Age climate swings, living alongside a separate human species — and they built a cultural tradition lasting 17,000 years or more. Genetic and archaeological evidence continues to refine our picture of how these early Europeans related to Neanderthals, including evidence of interbreeding, suggesting the boundary between cultures and species was more porous than once thought.
The Aurignacian also matters for what it tells us about the non-European world. The Near Eastern Levantine Aurignacian reminds us that Europe was not the sole locus of this cultural flowering — similar traditions were developing across a broad arc of the Old World. And cave art from Sulawesi, Indonesia, dated to comparable or even earlier periods, suggests that figurative and symbolic expression may have emerged in multiple places, or been carried out of Africa long before Europeans painted Chauvet.
Blindspots and limits
The Aurignacian record is necessarily incomplete — most organic material from this period has not survived, and what we have comes from a small number of excavated cave sites, most of them in western and central Europe. The populations of sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and Australia were producing their own symbolic cultures during this same window, and the archaeological record there is thinner not because less was happening, but because fewer sites have been excavated with equivalent resources and attention.
The transition from Neanderthals to modern humans in Europe also remains contested. Whether the Aurignacians displaced, absorbed, or simply outlasted Neanderthals — and at what pace — is still debated. The overlap between the two populations in Europe may have been shorter than previously believed, but the picture is not settled.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Aurignacian
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights gain historic recognition at COP30
- Rhinos return to Uganda’s Kidepo Valley
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
About this article
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