Around 25,000 B.C.E., a small group of mammoth hunters chose a hillside in what is now the Czech Republic and built something remarkable: a cluster of huts made from rocks and mammoth bones. The site they left behind — known today as Dolní Věstonice — became one of the most studied and celebrated archaeological finds in the world, offering a rare window into Upper Paleolithic life in Europe.
Key findings
- Dolní Věstonice settlement: The site dates to approximately 25,000 B.C.E., placing it among the earliest known human settlements ever excavated — a moment when modern humans were establishing durable, structured living spaces across Europe.
- Mammoth bone construction: Builders used mammoth bones and rocks to construct huts, demonstrating sophisticated planning and the ability to transform large-scale natural materials into functional shelter in a harsh glacial climate.
- Venus of Dolní Věstonice: Excavations also uncovered one of the oldest known ceramic figurines in the world — a small fired-clay female figure now considered among the most important prehistoric artworks ever found.
A community at the edge of the ice age
Twenty-five thousand years ago, glaciers still dominated much of northern Europe. The people who camped at Dolní Věstonice lived in the Pavlovian culture — a branch of the broader Gravettian tradition that stretched from Western Europe to the Russian steppes. They were part of a world where anatomically modern humans had been present in Europe for tens of thousands of years, but structured, recurring use of specific locations was still far from universal.
What makes Dolní Věstonice significant is the evidence of organization. The huts were not improvised shelters — they were built with intention, using mammoth bones as structural supports in a landscape where timber may have been scarce. Excavations at the site have revealed fire pits, butchered animal remains, personal ornaments, and human burials, all suggesting a community that returned to this location repeatedly over generations.
That repetition matters. A site used once by a passing band leaves a thin archaeological record. Dolní Věstonice left a deep one.
Art made from fire and clay
Among the most extraordinary discoveries at the site is the Venus of Dolní Věstonice — a small figurine of a female form, fired in a kiln-like pit at temperatures reaching around 700°C. It dates to approximately 25,000 B.C.E. and is widely regarded as one of the oldest known ceramic objects ever made by human hands.
The figurine belongs to a tradition of Venus figurines found across Gravettian Europe, from France to Siberia. Scholars debate their meaning — fertility symbols, spiritual objects, representations of specific women, or something else entirely. What is clear is that the people of Dolní Věstonice were not only surviving; they were making art, and they were firing clay in controlled conditions long before pottery became widespread.
That technological leap — the deliberate transformation of raw clay through heat — appears here in Europe roughly 25,000 years ago, well before it became common practice anywhere on Earth.
A site in a broader human world
It would be a mistake to treat Dolní Věstonice as isolated. The Gravettian peoples were connected across vast distances. Archaeological evidence from the Natural History Museum and other institutions shows trade networks, shared artistic traditions, and the movement of raw materials — amber, shells, stone — across hundreds of miles. The hunters at Dolní Věstonice were part of a wider human story, not an exception to it.
It is also worth remembering that human settlement was happening on multiple continents during this period. Australia had been continuously inhabited for at least 50,000 years. Peoples in Africa and Asia had long established complex, recurring uses of particular landscapes. Dolní Věstonice’s significance is as a particularly well-preserved and well-documented example, not as the singular origin point of human settlement.
Lasting impact
The discoveries at Dolní Věstonice reshaped how archaeologists understand Upper Paleolithic life. Before such sites were excavated and dated, the dominant picture of Ice Age humans was one of near-constant wandering — small bands following animals with little attachment to place. Dolní Věstonice, alongside nearby Pavlov and Předmostí, helped overturn that picture.
The evidence of ceramic technology at the site is particularly consequential. The controlled use of fire to transform clay — demonstrated here at 25,000 B.C.E. — is an early data point in a long arc that eventually leads to pottery, metallurgy, and the material foundations of urban civilization. The people at Dolní Věstonice did not know that. But the capability was there.
The site also contributes to ongoing research into ancient DNA and human migration. Genomic studies published in Nature have begun to trace the population movements of Gravettian peoples, including those connected to sites like Dolní Věstonice, illuminating how modern Europeans are connected — and not connected — to Ice Age ancestors.
Blindspots and limits
The word “permanent” in many descriptions of Dolní Věstonice should be read cautiously. Many archaeologists classify it as a semi-permanent or seasonally reoccupied hunting camp rather than a year-round residential settlement in the modern sense. The distinction matters: the site shows sophisticated, repeated use of a location, but it does not necessarily mean people lived there continuously through every season. The claim that it is the single oldest permanent human settlement ever found is also contested — other sites in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia have been proposed as earlier candidates, and the definition of “settlement” itself shapes the answer. What is widely accepted is that Dolní Věstonice is among the oldest and richest archaeological sites of its kind in Europe.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Dolní Věstonice
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous communities secure landmark land rights recognition at COP30
- Uganda reintroduces rhinos to Kidepo Valley after decades of absence
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
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