Skip to Content
Advertisement
Paleontology

Neanderthals May Have Invented the Original Crayon

The most concrete evidence of the tools this human ancestor used to doodle

In another blow to the image of Neanderthal as brutish troglodyte, we’ve identified the tools the ancient hominin used to draw and decorate. Chunks of hardened clay and sand pigmented an earthy red by iron oxide may have served as Neanderthal’s original crayon.

Featured Video

Researchers analyzed 70,000-year-old bits of ochre, a natural clay earth pigment, and noticed that some of the artifacts, recovered from known Neanderthal dig sites scattered in Crimea and mainland Ukraine, bore marks of shaping and sharpening that pointed to their use as ancient crayons. Using scanning electron microscopy and portable X-ray machines, European scientists studied 16 pieces of ochre and suggested that Neanderthals may have used some for symbolic (read nonutilitarian) purposes.

Read more: “How Neanderthals Kept Our Ancestors Warm

“These objects and the markings they produced likely played roles in communication, identity expression, and intergenerational knowledge transmission,” the researchers wrote in a recent Science Advances paper. “The curated nature of the ochre fragments further supports this interpretation, suggesting that they were preserved, transported, and reused—behaviors that reflect both planning and cultural investment.”

Advertisement
ANCIENT CRAYONS: Researchers studied these Crimean "coloring materials," noting the scratch marks and evidence of sharpening that hint at their use as paleolithic art tools. Three of the objects—ZSKV-05, ZSKV-06, and ZSKV-07—have features "exceeding utilitarian use," they suggest. Image by D'Errico, F., et al. Science Advances (2025).

Did all Neanderthals doodle with crayons? The authors of the paper say their findings can’t answer this question. Neanderthals lived for millenia and across a vast geographical range, from Western Europe into Central Asia and Siberia. “Our findings do not imply that all Neanderthal ochre use in Crimea was symbolic nor that this behavior was continuous over tens of thousands of years.”

But the findings do lend some material support to the long-held suspicion that Neanderthals, at least in some places at some times, expressed themselves by decorating their bodies, clothing, or surroundings. Our ancient ancestors seem to get a little more human everyday.

Enjoying  Nautilus? Subscribe to our free newsletter.

Advertisement

Lead image: D'Errico, F., et al. Science Advances (2025).

Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Paleontology

Explore Paleontology

The Dainty Dinosaur That’s Rewriting Evolutionary History

New alvarezsaur fossil offers a Cretaceous missing link

March 5, 2026

When Scientists Are Dinosaurs 

At the paleontology conference, her new theory was shouted down

March 3, 2026

How the Triceratops Used Its Giant Nose

Its outsized nasal cavities helped it maintain body temperature

February 24, 2026

Paleontologists Solve a Prehistoric Murder Mystery

Welcome to CSI: Cretaceous Period

February 23, 2026

“Hell Heron”: New Dinosaur Species with a Head-mounted Sword Discovered in Africa

The dramatic find sheds new light on the diversity of spinosaurs

February 20, 2026