TEXT A Scotland Yard’s top
fingerprint expert, Detective Chief superintendent Gerald Lamhourne had a
request from the British Museum’s Prehistoric department to force his magnifying
glass on a mystery somewhat outside my usual beat. This was not a question of
Whodunit, but Who Was lt. The blunt instruments, he pored over were the antlers
of red deer, dated by radio-carbon examination as being up to 5,000 years old.
They were used as mining picks by Neolithic man to hack flints and chalk, and
the fingerprints he was looking for were of our remote ancestors who had last
wielded them. The antlers were unearthed in July during the
British Museum’s five-year-long excavation at Grime’s Graves. near Therford,
Norfolk, a 93 acre site containing more than 600 vertical shafts in the chalk
some 40 feet deep. From artifacts found in many parts of Britain it is evident
that flint was extensively used by Neolithic man as he slowly learned how to
farm land in the period from 3, 000 to 1, 500 B. C. Flint was
especially used for ax-heads to clear forests for agriculture, and the quality
of the flint on the Norfolk site suggests that the miners there were kept busy
with many orders. What excited Mr. CT. Sieveking, the museum’s
deputy director of the excavations, was the dried mud still sticking to some of
them. "Our deduction is that the miners coated the base of the antlers with mud
so that they could get a better grip," he says. "The exciting possibility was
that fingerprints left in this mud might at last identify as individuals as
people who have left few relics, who could not read or write, but who may have
had much more intelligence than had been supposed in the past."
Chief Superintendent Lambourne, who had "assisted" the British Museum by
taking the fingerprints of a 4, 000-year-old Egyptian mummy, spent two hours
last week examining about 50 antlers. On some he found minute marks indicating a
human hand--that part of the hand just below the fingers where most pressure
would be brought to bear the wielding of a pick. After 25 years’
specialization in the Yard’s fingerprints department, Chief Superintendent
Lambourne knows all about ridge structures--technically known as the
"tri-radiate section". It was his identification of that part of
the hand that helped to incriminate some of the Great Train Robbers. In 1995 he
discovered similar handprints on a bloodstained tee-maker on a golf-course where
a woman had been brutally murdered. They eventually led to the killer, after 4,
065 handprints had been taken. Chief Superintendent Lamboure had
agreed to visit the Norfolk site during further excavations next summer, when it
is hoped that further hand-marked antlers will come to light, But he is cautious
about the historic significance of his findings. "Fingerprints
and handprints are unique to each individual but they can tell nothing about the
age, physical characteristics, even sex of the person who left them," he says.
"Even the finger prints of gorilla could be mistaken for those of a man. But if
a number of imprinted antlers are recovered from given shafts on this site I
could at least determine which antlers were handled by the same man, and from
there might be deduced the number of miners employed in a team."
"As an indication of intelligence I might determine which way up the
miners held the antlers and how they wielded them." To Mr.
Sieveking and his museum colleagues, any such findings will be added to their
dossier of what might appear to the layman as trivial and unrelated facts but
from which might emerge one day an impressive new image of our remote ancestors.
(620) What was the aim of the investigation referred to in the passage
A.To provide some kind of identification of a few Neolithic met. B.To find out more about the period when the antlers were used. C.To discover more about the purpose of the antlers. D.To learn more about the types of men who used the antlers.