![The Qesem Cave people severed the metapodial (the bone that connects the hoof to the leg) of a fallow deer and then wrapped it immediately in skin as its marrow could be preserved as an ample source of food for at least nine weeks. (Roni /Adobe Stock)](https://members.ancient-origins.net/sites/default/files/Qesem-Cave.jpg)
![The Qesem Cave people severed the metapodial (the bone that connects the hoof to the leg) of a fallow deer and then wrapped it immediately in skin as its marrow could be preserved as an ample source of food for at least nine weeks. (Roni /Adobe Stock)](https://members.ancient-origins.net/sites/default/files/styles/article_category/public/Qesem-Cave.jpg?itok=Qi6_ppRw)
Qesem Cave People And The Genesis of Innovation
In 2000, during the construction of a highway in Israel, controlled explosives revealed a Paleolithic cave site by a large rocky outcrop just beneath the Arab-Israeli city of Kafr Qasim. What makes this site so remarkable is that the people of the...
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