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Venus figures: Exuberant women should protect against hunger and cold

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Mysterious figures of overweight women from the time of the hunter-gatherers

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The “Venus von Willendorf” and similar Stone Age representations are considered to be the oldest works of art known to man. Her extreme curves have so far been explained with pregnancy. Researchers are now bringing climate into play.

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The “Venus von Willendorf” is the best known representation of women that came to us from the Upper Palaeolithic

Quelle: picture alliance / HERBERT NEUBAUER; picture alliance / Heritage-Images; picture-alliance / akg-images

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IHer breasts were ample, her thighs large and plump, her stomach much more voluminous than would be expected from a woman who had to try day in and day out to hunt and gather her and her children to ensure their livelihood. Fat must have been a luxury for the people of the Upper Paleolithic (40,000 to 10,000 BC). So why did they depict the human body in the oldest depictions as being drawn from fat?

The striking type has been known since 1908 during construction work in Willendorf, Lower Austria, an eleven centimeter high stone statuette came to light. The “Venus von Willendorf” is characterized by a fat belly and large breasts. The shampoo has also been carefully worked out, while her face is veiled by a hairstyle or hood-like headgear.

ARCHIVE - A female statuette carved from mammoth ivory, the so-called Venus vom Hohlen Felsen, will be presented to the public on May 13th, 2009 in Tübingen (Baden-Württemberg).  The oldest known human figure in the world, Venus from the hollow rock, has a permanent place in the museum in Blaubeuren (Alb-Donau district).  Photo: Marijan Murat / dpa +++ dpa-Bildfunk +++ – –

The “Venus vom Hohlefels” is the oldest known representation of a person

Quelle: picture alliance / dpa

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Similar representations are known from France to Russia. The ivory “Venus vom Hohlefels”, which came to light in 2008 in a cave at the foot of the Swabian Alb, became famous. At 35,000 to 31,000 years old, it is a lot older than the figurine from Willendorf, whose age is dated to around 30,000 years.

What the people of the Middle Stone Age wanted to represent with these statuettes has not yet been conclusively clarified. “There are many possible interpretations,” it says succinctly at the Natural History Museum Vienna about his “Venus von Willendorf”. Now scientists have the University of Colorado in the journal „Obesity“ presented a new attempt to explain it: “Some of the earliest works of art in the world are these mysterious figures of overweight women from the time of the hunters and gatherers in the European Ice Age, where overweight would not be expected at all,” writes the first author and doctor Richard Johnson: “We show that these figures correlate with times of extreme food shortages.”

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For its analysis, the team examined the figurines and measured their waist-to-hip and waist-to-shoulder ratio. This finding was compared with historical climate data and analyzed using behavioral models from anthropology.

Johnson and his team assume that humans of the species Homo sapiens from around 45,000 BC. Came from Africa to Europe. The climate prepared the way for them, because the beginning of the so-called Upper Palaeolithic was marked by warming. The hunt for large mammals such as reindeer, mammoth, woolly rhinoceros or horse offered the migrating groups a decent livelihood. And Homo sapiens began to use his increased brain potential not only for technical innovations, but also to reproduce his environment or to express feelings. This is how the first pictures and figurative representations came about.

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Neanderthals in summer, artwork. Like modern humans, Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis) are members of the Homo genus. They inhabited Europe and western Asia between 230,000 and 29,000 years ago. They did not use complex tools but had mastery of fire and built shelters. It is thought that they had language and a complex social structure, living in small family groups and hunting for food. The male Neanderthal at left is holding the skull of a sabre-toothed cat. It is not known why Neanderthals became extinct, but one theory is that they were outcompeted by modern humans (Homo sapiens).– – – – –

However, that changed 40,000 years ago. Because the climatic changes caused the temperatures to drop again, and the so-called Vistula high glacial increasingly shaped people’s living space. Now it became more and more difficult for the hunter-gatherers to get enough food. The scientists’ measurements showed that in the regions closest to the advancing glaciers, the statuettes were significantly more rounded than in rooms that were not yet threatened by the ice.

From this, the researchers concluded that the figures do not depict a pregnant woman, as suggested by other authors, but represent an idealized body type for the increasingly difficult living conditions. Quickly putting on fat, i.e. being able to use food well for yourself, was a great advantage in times of shortage. Women with this disposition were better able to carry a child through pregnancy and breastfeeding than those who stayed slim.

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The Leipzig researchers also found a connection with the cholesterol level in the genome of the Neanderthals– – – – –

Before they were weaned from breastfeeding, the women would have had to bring their children through two icy winters. “Women need more fat than men, about 17 percent body fat to support menstruation and 22 percent body fat to support an ideal pregnancy,” write Johnson and his co-authors. In times of hunger, a medium-sized woman needs about 16 kilograms of fat to be able to generate the necessary calories for pregnancy and breastfeeding for more than three months.

It is possible that the Venus figures conjured up a magical spell that was supposed to help a woman through pregnancy, childbirth and breastfeeding. Many are worn out, suggesting that they have been passed down through generations. Body fat was not only an advantage for carrying and breastfeeding a baby, it was also useful as a protection against the cold.

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