Deep in what is now the Czech Republic, roughly 29,000 years ago, a group of people gathered around a pit filled with heated stones and cooked mammoth meat. What archaeologists uncovered at the site called Pavlov VI is one of the most detailed windows we have into how Ice Age hunter-gatherers not only survived, but organized complex meals, made art, and shaped the world around them with intention.
Key findings at Pavlov VI
- Gravettian roasting pit: Excavators found a roughly 4-foot-wide central pit with heating stones still in place, used to cook mammoth and other animals luau-style underground.
- Mammoth bones: The remains of a female mammoth and a calf were recovered near the pit, suggesting these people deliberately targeted large prey — unlike nearby groups who favored reindeer.
- Fired clay artifacts: Ceramic fragments, decorated with reindeer hair and textile impressions, bore actual fingerprints of the site’s occupants — among the oldest known uses of fired clay in Europe.
A kitchen 29,000 years in the making
The site was excavated by Jiri Svoboda, a professor at the University of Brno and director of its Institute of Archaeology, along with colleagues. Their findings were published in the journal Antiquity.
What they described wasn’t just a hearth. It was a cooking complex. At the center sat the large roasting pit, ringed by a circle of smaller boiling pits — a layout Svoboda believes was covered by a teepee or yurt-like structure. The whole arrangement points to a level of planning and social organization that challenges older assumptions about Paleolithic life as purely improvised and reactive.
“We found the heating stones still within the pit and around,” Svoboda told Discovery News. The cooking method — indirect heat from stones, underground — is functionally similar to techniques still used in Pacific and Indigenous North American traditions today, suggesting this approach to slow, even cooking is one humanity has discovered and rediscovered across time and geography.
More than a meal
The people at Pavlov VI were not only eating well — they were making things. Stone tools including spatulas, blades, and saws suggest skilled butchering. Decorated shells with cut marks and traces of red and black pigment hint at personal adornment or ceremony. Perforated pebbles and fragments of fired clay round out a material culture that reads as rich and deliberate.
One artifact stands out: a small clay head shaped to resemble a lion, incised with a sharp tool and then fired. Svoboda described it as possibly a piece of “sympathetic magic” — a practice where objects resembling animals or people are used to influence outcomes in hunting, healing, or ritual life. This kind of thinking, using symbols to reach beyond the immediate physical world, reflects a cognitive complexity that is fully modern in every meaningful sense.
Decorated shells found at the site were likely traded or carried from considerable distances. The movement of symbolic objects across Ice Age Europe is increasingly well-documented, and Pavlov VI fits into a picture of connected communities sharing not just goods but ideas.
The Gravettian world
The Gravettian culture flourished across Europe roughly between 33,000 and 22,000 B.C.E., spanning from what is now Spain to Russia. These were anatomically modern humans — biologically identical to us — navigating a continent shaped by glacial cold, vast open steppes, and enormous megafauna. The Moravian region of today’s Czech Republic was particularly productive for Gravettian settlement, yielding some of the most remarkable archaeological finds from this era anywhere on Earth.
The Venus figurines of the Gravettian, found across a wide geographic range, are among the most recognized artifacts of prehistoric art. But the Pavlov VI site adds something different to that record: evidence of everyday sophistication, of a group that planned meals, organized space, and made meaning from the materials around them.
Archaeologist Erik Trinkaus of Washington University called the site “one more example of the incredibly rich human behavior from this time period,” praising the excavation as meticulously conducted.
Lasting impact
The discovery at Pavlov VI matters not just as a data point but as a reorientation. For much of modern history, the popular image of Paleolithic life was sparse and brutish — people barely getting by. Sites like this one dismantle that picture methodically.
The cooking techniques documented here — pit roasting with heated stones, multiple preparation zones — represent sophisticated thermal knowledge. The same principles underlie earth ovens used by the Māori hāngī, the Hawaiian imu, and the Mexican barbacoa. Whether through direct descent or parallel invention, humanity keeps arriving at the same elegant solution: wrap food in earth and heat, and time does the rest.
The fired clay at Pavlov VI also places this community among the earliest known ceramic makers anywhere. The origins of ceramic technology in Moravia predate pottery-making in East Asia and the Near East by thousands of years — a reminder that the story of human innovation rarely runs in a single straight line from one place outward.
These people left fingerprints in clay. That detail is almost impossible to sit with without feeling something.
Blindspots and limits
The site’s interpretation depends heavily on spatial relationships and inference — we cannot know with certainty whether the teepee-like structure existed, whether the shells were traded or found locally, or what precise ritual meaning the lion head held. The “~29,000 B.C.E.” date itself carries a margin of uncertainty typical of radiocarbon dating at this time depth. What the material record shows is compelling; what it means in full remains, as always, a conversation between the evidence and the imagination of those studying it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: NBC News — Prehistoric kitchen found with roasted mammoth on menu
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Rhinos return to Uganda’s Kidepo Valley after decades of absence
- Indigenous land rights recognition reaches 160 million hectares at COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
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