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  • Westwood among LIV Golf players qualifying for The Open

    Westwood among LIV Golf players qualifying for The Open

    Final Qualifying for The 153rd Open Championship at Royal Portrush is underway, with 14 LIV Golf players competing across four UK venues—Burnham & Berrow, Dundonald Links, Royal Cinque Ports, and West Lancashire—with at least 20 spots available in the 156-player field.

    Entering this week, 16 LIV Golf players were already exempt into The Open field.

    DUNDONALD LINKS: FINAL QUALIFYING FOR THE OPEN

    Majesticks GC co-captain Lee Westwood secured a spot in the Open Championship with a fantastic performance in the 36-hole qualifier. Westwood earned medalist honors after rounds of 70-67 to post a 7-under total. The Englishman has found some form recently on LIV Golf. He’s finished T10 in Virginia and had T25s in Dallas and Riyadh.

    Westwood last played The Open in 2022 but has a strong history in the championship, including a T4 at Portrush in 2019.

    “Royal Portrush is a fantastic golf course, and I played well there last time. I finished fourth in 2019,” Westwood said. “The Open Championship is the greatest tournament on the golfing calendar … I hit some nice shots coming down the stretch there. I think 7 under is pretty good.”

    WEST LANCASHIRE: FINAL QUALIFYING FOR THE OPEN

    Lucas Herbert of Ripper GC has secured a spot at The Open Championship after earning medalist honors at West Lancashire with rounds of 69-67 for an 8-under total. At LIV Golf Dallas, the Australian spoke about the importance of getting into the major championship.

    “I love The Open,” Herbert said. “You know, [Herbert’s caddie, Nick Pugh] being from the UK as well, it’s his one major. I think if we could pick one for the year, he would pick that one … I played three or four of them now and love, love my opportunities when I have gotten them to play it. So, yeah, if I can get another one, that’d be great.”

    Now that he’s in, Herbert is also high on his chances to do well at Royal Portrush.

    “I feel like my game is trending in the right way as well,” he said. “So, if I can play well enough this week or on Tuesday to be able to get in, then my game’s probably in a good enough spot to be able to go and contend.”

    ROYAL CINQUE PORTS: FINAL QUALIFYING FOR THE OPEN

    Dean Burmester of Stinger GC qualified for the Open Championship. The South African played brilliantly over the course of 36-holes to punch his ticket to Royal Portrush.

    Burmester finished T23 at LIV Golf Virginia and T18 at LIV Golf Dallas leading into the qualifier. For the season, he is currently 11th in the individual standings. The 36-year old will be making his 4th Open Championship start. He’s had success in the Open, finishing T11 in 2022 and T19 in 2024.

    BURNHAM & BERROW: FINAL QUALIFYING FOR THE OPEN

    Three LIV Golf players (Jinichiro Kozuma, Caleb Surratt, Anirban Lahiri) are competing at Royal Cinque Ports. Check back for updates when play concludes.

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  • Kate Moss’ Cosmoss Enters Liquidation

    Kate Moss’ Cosmoss Enters Liquidation

    Cosmoss, the premium skincare and wellness brand, founded by the supermodel Kate Moss has entered liquidation proceedings.

    According to corporate filings, the company appointed liquidators on June 24, and filed to close its operations via the winding up process on June 25.

    In its liquidation filing, the company declared it owed $4 million to creditors, including more than $3 million to Moss’ talent agency, Kate Moss Agency. It last filed company accounts in 2023 with the UK’s Companies House; it has never disclosed its revenue.

    Originally founded in 2022, Cosmoss offered a range of perfumes, skincare and teas, ranging from $25 for tea to $155 for its Sacred Mist perfume. While Moss is a cultural icon and has been an ambassador for major brands including Calvin Klein and Diet Coke, she is famously private, rarely granting interviews – to some commentators, her public image was at odds with the brand’s wellness aims.

    The brand was marketed with homeopathic and spiritual claims, and was carried in Liberty London and Fenwick department stores.

    Moss is the company’s largest shareholder, alongside Warsaw Labs, a business incubator, the homeopath Victoria Young and other business partners.

    Representatives for Moss did not respond to a request for comment.

    Sign up to The Business of Beauty newsletter, your complimentary, must-read source for the day’s most important beauty and wellness news and analysis.

    Learn more:

    Why Kate Moss Can Sell Diet Coke and Wellness

    The model is better known for her hard living past than her taste in beauty products. But Moss’s past aversion to self-promotion is potentially setting her new brand Cosmoss up for success, argues BoF beauty editor-at-large Rachel Strugatz.

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  • Gird your loins! The Devil Wears Prada 2 is officially in production: Everything we know so far

    Gird your loins! The Devil Wears Prada 2 is officially in production: Everything we know so far

    Last month, as per an ET report, we shared that the Devil Wears Prada sequel was projected to go into production, in July — and come July 1, it’s happened!

    The Devil Wears Prada 2 is official in production!(Photos: X)

    The Devil Wears Prada 2, has officially commenced filming, as per a Variety report. While Meryl Streep and Emily Blunt were always on board since the announcement, set to step into their iconic characters of Miranda Priestly and Emily Charlton, confirmation when it came to Anne Hathaway returning as Andrea Sachs was left in the lurch.

    Well, the holy trinity is coming together (phew) — and so is Nigel! In addition to Meryl, Emily and Anne, Stanley Tucci too will be returning for the sequel to reprise his role of Nigel. Now someone whose NOT returning? Adrien Grenier, who played Nate, Andrea’s boyfriend. Now Miranda may or may not be the devil, but Nate? He definitely was.

    While the 2006 release followed the templated expectations of the time — of the lead finding herself in simpler things as opposed to the glitz and the glam, the cult status of the film over nearly two decades has made one thing very, very clear. If anybody was holding Andy back from realising her true potential, it was her boyfriend, with his selfish demands and judgmental disposition. Now while there’s no gate for Adrien, there definitely is tons of it for Nate, and the OG fans of the film will only be more than happy to not deal with his negativity.

    Finally, the Devil Wears Prada sequel has also welcomed a new cast member aboard. Kenneth Branagh, well known for having played Detective Poirot, and even better known for his Academy Award, BAFTA, Emmy and Golden Globe wins, will be playing Miranda’s husband in the part 2.

    David Frankel, the OG director of the film, is also returning for the sequel in tow with writer Aline Brosh McKenna. 20th Century Studios, via their very chic intimation, announced that The Devil Wears Prada 2 would be in production right through summer.

    Now as the film gets ready for its May 1 release next year, we always have the OG to stream on OTT.

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  • Deadly Salmonella in cows is on the rise globally

    Deadly Salmonella in cows is on the rise globally



    A new study examines the economic impact of Salmonella Dublin across Danish dairy farms over a 10-year period.

    The infectious and multi-resistant cattle disease Salmonella Dublin can be fatal to both humans and animals and causes significant losses for farmers. Although Denmark has attempted to eradicate the disease since 2008, it has not yet succeeded.

    The new study points to possible reasons—and the necessary solutions.

    While we’ve all heard of salmonella in chickens, salmonella in cows is likely unknown to many. Nevertheless, Salmonella Dublin is a disease that has been present in cattle herds for decades—in Denmark as well as many other countries. And it is on the rise globally.

    It causes pneumonia and blood poisoning and kills many thousands of calves and cows every year.

    Although Salmonella Dublin infects humans far less frequently than the more regular salmonella, there is every reason to take it seriously: it is significantly more dangerous and kills up to 12% of those who become infected. At the same time, it is often resistant to antibiotics. Infection can occur through contact with animals as well as through unpasteurized dairy products and undercooked meat.

    Still, Denmark has not managed to eradicate the disease—despite a national eradication plan launched in 2008, which set out to completely eliminate the disease. Today, the infection rate is estimated to be around 5% of Danish cattle herds, down from 20-25% in 2008.

    In contrast, the infection has increased in recent years to about 18% of herds in the United States and as much as 60% in the United Kingdom.

    Salmonella Dublin is not just a serious threat in the barn. Globally, it is a potential public health risk that is likely to grow as antibiotic resistance spreads. This is a bacterium that kills people every year, and it is high time we do more to combat it,” says Dagim Belay, assistant professor at the food and resource economics department at the University of Copenhagen.

    “Denmark has made great progress in the fight against this disease—so why have we not yet reached the goal? One possible reason is that farmers may not have a strong enough incentive to fight it. However, our research shows that the consequences are not only a matter of health—there are also hidden financial losses associated with infection,” says Jakob Vesterlund Olsen from the food and resource economics department.

    The study shows that Salmonella Dublin leads to increased calf mortality, lower milk yield, higher medication costs, and more veterinary treatments.

    “The tricky thing about Salmonella Dublin is that it often flies under the radar. Many herds are infected without visible symptoms, meaning both the disease and the economic losses can develop gradually without being noticed. Infection reduces productivity and weakens the animals year after year—and the financial losses accumulate over time,” says Belay.

    Cattle farms with high levels of infection face average additional annual costs of around EUR 11,300 (about $13,307 USD. But even herds with low levels of infection face financial losses. A typical herd of 200 dairy cows with low-level infection incurs extra variable costs of approximately EUR 6,700 (about $7,891 USD) per year.

    “Our estimates are conservative. They are based on data from a Danish system that already has a control program—unlike most other countries. If similar estimates were made in the UK or the US, the economic costs would be significantly higher,” says Belay.

    The researchers highlight a key problem in how Danish authorities currently monitor Salmonella Dublin. The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration measures the level of antibodies against the bacterium in the farm’s milk tank, and if the antibody level is below a certain threshold, the herd is deemed salmonella-free.

    “Threshold-based regulation has been instrumental in helping Denmark substantially reduce the prevalence of Salmonella Dublin to its current low level. But the current threshold is rather arbitrarily set. And our data shows that production losses already occur at infection levels well below that threshold,” says Olsen.

    “So, it is also crucial to give farmers stronger incentives to eradicate the problem. For example, by offering subsidies to farmers who invest in prevention, early detection, and control measures, or by introducing a discounted milk price for milk from chronically infected herds,” says Belay.

    Finally, the researchers urge authorities to provide targeted information to cattle producers about the hidden costs of Salmonella Dublin and about effective control strategies.

    The study appears in the journal Agricultural Economics.

    Source: University of Copenhagen

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  • S&P 500 Rally Wavers After Record-Breaking Run: Markets Wrap

    S&P 500 Rally Wavers After Record-Breaking Run: Markets Wrap

    (Bloomberg) — A rally that drove stocks to all-time highs wavered and bond yields rose as an unexpected increase in job openings dimmed the outlook for Federal Reserve rate cuts, with Chair Jerome Powell reiterating his wait-and-see stance amid the threat of tariffs.

    While most shares in the S&P 500 gained, the index barely budged amid a slide in technology – which powered the market last quarter. A gauge of the “Magnificent Seven” megacaps lost 1.3%. Tesla Inc. sank 5% as President Donald Trump threatened to withdraw subsidies from Elon Musk’s companies and examine the billionaire’s immigration status. The Russell 2000 rose 1.3%.

    Subscribe to the Stock Movers Podcast on Apple, Spotify and other Podcast Platforms.   

    Short-dated Treasuries, which are more sensitive to imminent Fed moves, underperformed longer maturities. The dollar halted a slide that drove the currency to the weakest since 2022.

    US job openings hit the highest since November, largely fueled by leisure and hospitality, and layoffs declined. Powell and other policymakers have consistently characterized labor-market conditions as strong in recent weeks.

    “As long as the labor market remains solid, the US economy can continue to chug ahead, while helping reduce the risk of stagflation” said Bret Kenwell at eToro. “It would also buy the Fed more breathing room when it comes to interest rates.”

    Speaking Tuesday during a panel in Portugal, Powell repeated that the central bank probably would have cut rates further this year absent Trump’s expanded use of tariffs. Still, when asked if July were too soon for a rate cut, Powell didn’t rule out the possibility.

    Meantime, Trump’s $3.3 trillion tax and spending cut bill passed the Senate after a push by Republican leaders to persuade holdouts to back the legislation.

    The government’s June employment report, due Thursday, is expected to a show a slowdown in nonfarm payroll growth and an uptick in the unemployment rate.

    “Federal Reserve interest-rate policy is likely on hold for now,” said Josh Hirt at Vanguard. “If the labor market remains on the trajectory we expect, the Fed can afford to be patient. We anticipate the Fed will be able to make two more rate cuts later this year in this environment.”

    A July rate cut is viewed as a long shot, but swap contracts assign it about 15% odds versus near zero last mont. A quarter-point cut is fully priced in for September.

    Separate data Tuesday showed US factory activity contracted in June for a fourth consecutive month as orders and employment shrank at a faster pace, extending the malaise in manufacturing.

    “While the hit to manufacturing activity from tariffs so far appears to have been limited, the further small rise in the prices paid index last month adds to evidence that firms are facing higher costs as a result,” said Thomas Ryan at Capital Economics.

    Corporate Highlights:

    • Shares for solar companies rose on Tuesday on the Senate’s decision to remove an excise tax on wind and solar projects from President Donald Trump’s tax and spending bill.
    • Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk has assumed oversight of sales in Europe and the US, leaving deputy and senior vice president Tom Zhu over Asia, following the high profile departure of Omead Afshar, people familiar with the matter said.
    • Boeing Co. said Stephen Parker will oversee the defense, space and security unit on a permanent basis, as Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg molds his top leadership team, including the appointment of a new chief financial officer.
    • Ford Motor Co.’s electric vehicle sales plunged 31.4% in the second quarter after the automaker ordered dealers not to sell its battery-powered Mustang Mach-e model due to a safety flaw that could lock occupants in the car.
    • UnitedHealth Group Inc. and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center resolved a contract dispute that threatened to interrupt treatment for thousands of cancer patients in the New York City area.
    • AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. said it reached an agreement with a majority of bondholders to end litigation that resulted from the movie theater chain’s debt restructuring last year.
    • Wolfspeed Inc., a chipmaker caught in President Donald Trump’s push to reshape Biden-era tech subsidies, filed bankruptcy to enact a creditor-backed plan to slash $4.6 billion in debt.
    • Macau’s monthly gaming revenue rose 19% in June, exceeding analyst expectations as visitors poured in to the world’s biggest gambling hub for Cantonese pop concerts and other entertainment offerings.
    • AstraZeneca Plc’s Chief Executive Officer Pascal Soriot wants to move the drugmaker’s stock listing to the US, the Times reported, in what would be another sign of the UK’s waning status as a magnet for global capital.

    Some of the main moves in markets:

    Stocks

    • The S&P 500 was little changed as of 2:27 p.m. New York time
    • The Nasdaq 100 fell 0.7%
    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1%
    • The MSCI World Index was little changed
    • Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Total Return Index fell 1.3%
    • The Russell 2000 Index rose 1.3%

    Currencies

    • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
    • The euro was little changed at $1.1778
    • The British pound was little changed at $1.3734
    • The Japanese yen rose 0.2% to 143.72 per dollar

    Cryptocurrencies

    • Bitcoin fell 1.5% to $105,951.23
    • Ether fell 3.2% to $2,423.54

    Bonds

    • The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced three basis points to 4.25%
    • Germany’s 10-year yield declined three basis points to 2.57%
    • Britain’s 10-year yield declined three basis points to 4.45%

    Commodities

    • West Texas Intermediate crude rose 0.5% to $65.41 a barrel
    • Spot gold rose 1.1% to $3,338.52 an ounce

    ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • Rare NASA Satellite Footage Reveals the Mysterious Tunguska Blast Zone After 115 Years – MSN

    1. Rare NASA Satellite Footage Reveals the Mysterious Tunguska Blast Zone After 115 Years  MSN
    2. A Cosmic Explosion Over Siberia  NASA Earth Observatory (.gov)
    3. 06/30 Open Thread – Tunguska  Daily Kos
    4. Look: NASA Satellite Images Reveal Mysterious Blast Site of 1908 Tunguska Event that Scorched Remote Siberia  The Debrief

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  • TSB to be sold to Santander for up to £2.9bn

    TSB to be sold to Santander for up to £2.9bn

    British High Street bank TSB is being sold off by its Spanish-owner to rival Santander in a deal worth up to £2.9bn.

    The sale still has to be agreed by Sabadell’s shareholders, but if TSB does change hands, it will be the second time it has been sold in a decade.

    Santander declined to comment on whether the TSB brand – which can trace its roots back more than 200 years – will remain.

    TSB has 175 branches in the UK while Santander has around 349 banks in Britain, but it has been shutting branches, saying more customers want to do their banking digitally.

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  • How repetition helps art speak to us | MIT News

    How repetition helps art speak to us | MIT News

    Often when we listen to music, we just instinctually enjoy it. Sometimes, though, it’s worth dissecting a song or other composition to figure out how it’s built.

    Take the 1953 jazz standard “Satin Doll,” written by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, whose subtle structure rewards a close listening. As it happens, MIT Professor Emeritus Samuel Jay Keyser, a distinguished linguist and an avid trombonist on the side, has given the song careful scrutiny.

    To Keyser, “Satin Doll” is a glittering example of what he calls the “same/except” construction in art. A basic rhyme, like “rent” and “tent,” is another example of this construction, given the shared rhyming sound and the different starting consonants.

    In “Satin Doll,” Keyser observes, both the music and words feature a “same/except” structure. For instance, the rhythm of the first two bars of “Satin Doll” is the same as the second two bars, but the pitch goes up a step in bars three and four. An intricate pattern of this prevails throughout the entire body of “Satin Doll,” which Keyser calls “a musical rhyme scheme.”

    When lyricist Johnny Mercer wrote words for “Satin Doll,” he matched the musical rhyme scheme. One lyric for the first four bars is, “Cigarette holder / which wigs me / Over her shoulder / she digs me.” Other verses follow the same pattern.

    “Both the lyrics and the melody have the same rhyme scheme in their separate mediums, words and music, namely, A-B-A-B,” says Keyser. “That’s how you write lyrics. If you understand the musical rhyme scheme, and write lyrics to match that, you are introducing a whole new level of repetition, one that enhances the experience.”

    Now, Keyser has a new book out about repetition in art and its cognitive impact on us, scrutinizing “Satin Doll” along with many other works of music, poetry, painting, and photography. The volume, “Play It Again, Sam: Repetition in the Arts,” is published by the MIT Press. The title is partly a play on Keyser’s name.

    Inspired by the Margulis experiment

    The genesis of “Play It Again, Sam” dates back several years, when Keyser encountered an experiment conducted by musicologist Elizabeth Margulis, described in her 2014 book, “On Repeat.” Margulis found that when she altered modern atonal compositions to add repetition to them, audiences ranging from ordinary listeners to music theorists preferred these edited versions to the original works.

    “The Margulis experiment really caused the ideas to materialize,” Keyser says. He then examined repetition across art forms that featured research on associated cognitive activity, especially music, poetry, and the visual arts. For instance, the brain has distinct locations dedicated to the recognition of faces, places, and bodies. Keyser suggests this is why, prior to the advent of modernism, painting was overwhelmingly mimetic.

    Ideally, he suggests, it will be possible to more comprehensively study how our brains process art — to see if encountering repetition triggers an endorphin release, say. For now, Keyser postulates that repetition involves what he calls the 4 Ps: priming, parallelism, prediction, and pleasure. Essentially, hearing or seeing a motif sets the stage for it to be repeated, providing audiences with satisfaction when they discover the repetition.

    With remarkable range, Keyser vigorously analyzes how artists deploy repetition and have thought about it, from “Beowulf” to Leonard Bernstein, from Gustave Caillebotte to Italo Calvino. Some artworks do deploy identical repetition of elements, such as the Homeric epics; others use the “same/except” technique.

    Keyser is deeply interested in visual art displaying the “same/except” concept, such as Andy Warhol’s famous “Campbell Soup Cans” painting. It features four rows of eight soup cans, which are all the same — except for the kind of soup on each can.

    “Discovering this ‘same/except’ repetition in a work of art brings pleasure,” Keyser says.

    But why is this? Multiple experimental studies, Keyser notes, suggest that repeated exposure of a subject to an image — such as an infant’s exposure to its mother’s face — helps create a bond of affection. This is the “mere exposure” phenomenon, posited by social psychologist Robert Zajonc, who as Keyser notes in the book, studied in detail “the repetition of an arbitrary stimulus and the mild affection that people eventually have for it.”

    This tendency also helps explain why product manufacturers create ads with just the name of their products in ads: Seen often enough, the viewer bonds with the name. However the mechanism connecting repetition with pleasure works, and whatever its original function, Keyser argues that many artists have successfully tapped into it, grasping that audiences like repetition in poetry, painting, and music.

    A shadow dog in Albuquerque

    In the book, Keyser’s emphasis on repetition generates some distinctive interpretive positions. In one chapter, he digs into Lee Friendlander’s well-known photo, “Albuquerque, New Mexico,” a street scene with a jumble of signs, wires, and buildings, often interpreted in symbolic terms: It’s the American West frontier being submerged under postwar concrete and commerce.

    Keyser, however, has a really different view of the Friendlander photo. There is a dog sitting near the middle of it; to the right is the shadow of a street sign. Keyser believes the shadow resembles the dog, and thinks it creates playful repetition in the photo.

    “This particular photograph is really two photographs that rhyme,” Keyser says.“They’re the same, except one is the dog and one is the shadow. And that’s why that photograph is pleasurable, because you see that, even if you may not be fully aware of it. Sensing repetition in a work of art brings pleasure.”

    “Play It Again, Sam” has received praise from arts practitioners, among others. George Darrah, principal drummer and arranger of the Boston Pops Orchestra, has called the book “extraordinary” in its “demonstration of the ways that poetry, music, painting, and photography engender pleasure in their audiences by exploiting the ability of the brain to detect repetition.” He adds that “Keyser has an uncanny ability to simplify complex ideas so that difficult material is easily understandable.”

    In certain ways “Play It Again, Sam” contains the classic intellectual outlook of an MIT linguist. For decades, MIT-linked linguistics research has identified the universal structures of human language, revealing important similarities despite the seemingly wild variation of global languages. And here too, Keyser finds patterns that help organize an apparently boundless world of art. “Play It Again, Sam” is a hunt for structure.

    Asked about this, Keyser acknowledges the influence of his longtime field on his current intellectual explorations, while noting that his insights about art are part of a greater investigation into our works and minds.

    “I’m bringing a linguistic habit of mind to art,” Keyser says. “But I’m also pointing an analytical lens in the direction of natural predilections of the brain. The idea is to investigate how our aesthetic sense depends on the way the mind works. I’m trying to show how art can exploit the brain’s capacity to produce pleasure from non-art related functions.”

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  • Wimbledon 2025 results: Jack Draper cruises past Sebastian Baez in All England Club opener

    Wimbledon 2025 results: Jack Draper cruises past Sebastian Baez in All England Club opener

    Since Draper’s last appearance at Wimbledon, he has reached a Grand Slam semi-final at the US Open, won one of the biggest titles on the ATP Tour in Indian Wells and become only the fourth British man to crack the world’s top five.

    That means he is widely regarded as the fourth favourite – behind Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic – at this year’s grass-court major.

    A big reason why left-handed Draper can thrive on the slicker surface is his serve.

    The power and variety of his opening shot enables him to start points strongly.

    When he lands his first serve, it is effective. His first-serve percentage is only the 43rd best on the ATP Tour this year, but he is 14th in terms of points won after it.

    Against 38th-ranked Baez, Draper broke in the first game of the match and the strength of his first serve meant the Argentine had little chance of responding.

    He landed 78% of his first serves in the first set, winning 86% of those points with the help of four aces.

    By the time Baez decided he could not continue, Draper had won 23 of his 25 first-serve points (93%).

    “I served well, although I could have been a bit cleaner off the ground,” said Draper.

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  • Early humans used ochre for advanced toolmaking at Blombos Cave, study finds

    Early humans used ochre for advanced toolmaking at Blombos Cave, study finds

    A recent study led by researchers at SapienCE has revealed that ochre—previously considered primarily a symbolic pigment—played a crucial role in the production of sophisticated stone tools by early modern humans in Blombos Cave, South Africa, during the Middle Stone Age (MSA), between 90,000 and 70,000 years ago.

    The seven ochre retouchers from the MSA layers of Blombos Cave (BBC). Credit: Velliky et al., Science Advances (2025)

    While examining previously excavated artifacts at the SapienCE laboratory in Cape Town, archaeologist Elizabeth Velliky discovered an ochre fragment bearing wear patterns distinct from the typical grinding marks used for pigment production. Intrigued, she presented the artifact to colleagues Francesco d’Errico, Karen van Niekerk, and Christopher Henshilwood. Their examination confirmed the fragment had been deliberately shaped and used in a previously undescribed way. As they continued to sort through more discoveries, further ochre artifacts with the same marks appeared—seven in total—resulting in a reassessment of the use of ochre in early human life.

    Published in Science Advances, the study reports the initial direct archaeological evidence that ochre was specifically crafted into retouching tools for lithic implements. Experimental research and replication studies by d’Errico and colleagues revealed that these ochre “retouchers” were used for pressure flaking and direct percussion—advanced methods in shaping stone tools. These methods are highly dexterous and mentally demanding, especially for the production of the Still Bay points: bifacial tools renowned for their symmetry and refined forms.

    Notably, the ochre artifacts show signs of rejuvenation, indicating that they were maintained in good condition over time, a characteristic typical of personal or curated tools. “The sophistication of these pressure flakers implies that they were the personal property of expert toolmakers,” d’Errico said. “They may have functioned not only as practical instruments but also as indicators of identity and technical prowess.”

    Early humans used ochre for advanced toolmaking at Blombos Cave, study finds
    Macro-images of use traces on some artifacts. Credit: Velliky et al., Science Advances (2025)

    This discovery contradicts common assumptions that ochre’s primary role in the cultures of ancient people was symbolic—ritual, or body painting. Instead, it speaks to the pigment’s functional versatility. Earlier ethnographic and experimental studies had hinted at ochre’s use in such processes as hide tanning or hafting adhesives, but definitive archaeological evidence had remained elusive—until now.

    Henshilwood, director of SapienCE, emphasized the significance of the find: “We now have evidence that ochre was not only a medium for symbolic expression but also a key material in specialized tool production, reflecting a level of technological sophistication previously associated with much later periods.”

    Van Niekerk, a co-author and director of the Blombos Cave excavations, commented that this discovery adds another piece of evidence to how early Homo sapiens were behaviorally modern. “This discovery will add another layer to our understanding of the behavioral modernity of early Homo sapiens in southern Africa,” she said.

    Publication: Velliky, E. C., d’Errico, F., van Niekerk, K. L., & Henshilwood, C. S. (2025). Unveiling the multifunctional use of ochre in the Middle Stone Age: Specialized ochre retouchers from Blombos Cave. Science Advances11(26), eads2797. doi:10.1126/sciadv.ads2797


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