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Snapshot 5:Thu, May 14, 2026 7:02:13 AM GMT last edited by Vandita

Study: Neanderthals Performed Dentistry 59K Years Ago

Study: Neanderthals Performed Dentistry 59,00059K Years Ago

Study: Neanderthals Performed Dentistry 59K Years Ago
Image credit: David Ullrich via X

The Spin


AThe 59,000-year-old molar from Chagyrskaya Cave proves Neanderthals performed intentional dental surgery — drilling out infected tissue with stone tools, long before any known human medical procedure. The hole's shape, microscopic scratch patterns and signs of long-term post-procedure tooth wear all confirm this was skilled, targeted treatment. Neanderthals weren't primitive brutes; they diagnosed pain, selected tools and endured invasive procedures to heal.

Calling this a "root canal" wildly overstates what the evidence actually shows — no sealing, no sterilization, no proof of genuine medical understanding. A drilled-looking hole in an ancient tooth could easily reflect postmortem damage or basic scraping rather than intentional surgery. Sensational headlines keep getting ahead of the careful, skeptical scientific consensus this kind of extraordinary claim genuinely demands.


Metaculus Prediction

There's a 50% chance that a Neanderthal will be born again after 2099, according to the Metaculus prediction community.

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1