The skeleton of Cro-Magnon 1, a male Homo sapiens dating back 28,000 years, was discovered in 1868 in the Eyzies cave in France's southwestern Dordogne region.
To mark 150 years since the discovery of the bones, a team
of researchers including anthropologist Philippe Charlier reexamined
the remains.
At the end of their investigation, "we proposed a new
diagnosis: he had suffered from a type of neurofibromatosis," Charlier
told AFP.
Neurofibromatosis is a genetic disease which can cause
benign tumours to develop in the nervous system, and also spots or areas
of pigmentation on the skin.
The team's findings will be published Friday in the medical journal The Lancet.
Cro-Magnon
man's skull "has a lesion on the forehead which corresponds to the
presence of a neurofibroma (a benign nerve sheath tumor)" which has
eroded the bone, Charlier said.
"His left ear canal was also damaged, presumably also by a tumour that had grown," he added.
Equipped
with this diagnosis, "we have made a realistic reconstruction of the
face of this middle-aged man, taking into account his pathology".
The
visual forensic reconstruction shows a face covered in tumours,
including a large one on the forehead and scores more little nodules
across his face, in particular clustered around the mouth, nose and
eyes.
"He has them everywhere," Charlier said.
AFP
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