http://www.livescience.com/history/Nean ... 01215.html
Beim nächsten Pöckertreff bitte auf Eure Knochen achten

Moderatoren: Hans T., Nils B., Turms Kreutzfeldt, Chris
Der Knochen ist also wahrscheinlich vom HN.The bone likely came from a Neanderthal, as only they were found at Mousterian deposits at La Quina.
Vemutlich nichts, ein Neandertaler-Schädelknochen in Sedimenten, die ebenfalls dem Neandertaler zugeschrieben werden?Spannende Sache und v.a. was bedeutet das nun im Bezug auf das Verhältnis HS zu HN?!?
That is actually very similar to the wear reported in a study by Eva David and Jaques Pelegrin from some bone tools from Latvia (Europe). Their experimental study concludes that the wear on the archaeological bone tools looks like the wear resulting from retouching flint blades by pressure using the side of a long bone and an support beneath the blade. They also mention that this kind of wear is found in Mousterian contexts in Europe. There are illustrations of similar wear on Mousterian bone tools in a paper by Phillip Chase in Current Anthropology. If there are other modern knappers than Pelegrin who have tried these tools out, I'd guess you would find them in Europe.
CHASE, P.G. (1990) - Tool-making Tools and Middle Paleolithic Behavior.
Current Anthropology, Aug-Oct1990, Vol. 31 Issue 4, p443-447
DAVID É., PELEGRIN J. (2009) - Possible Late Glacial bone « retouchers » in the Baltic
Mesolithic: the Contribution of experimental tests with lithics on bone tools, éds. M. Street,
R.N.E. Barton, Th. Terberger, "Humans, environment and chronology of the Late Glacial of
the North European Plain" Proceedings of Workshop 14 (Commission XXXII) of the XVth
Congrès de l'Union internationale des Sciences pré- et protohistoriques UISPP, Lisboa, 4th-
9th of September 2006. Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums Tagungsbänder
6 des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums Mainz, 155-168.