You are looking at the face of a person who lived 15,000 years ago.
The remains of a modern human, discovered in a limestone cave in France in 1911, were initially thought to belong to a female due to the pelvis size. The skull was named the Magdalena Girl because its wisdom teeth had not yet erupted. However, further X-ray analysis revealed the teeth were impacted, leading researchers to conclude that the individual was actually a woman who died between the ages of 25 and 35.
The skull, damaged during its discovery and later incorrectly restored, was digitally reconstructed using modern scanning technology. Based on this data, French sculptor Elisabeth Daynes created the model you see now, bringing the Magdalena Woman back to life.
Named after her era, the Magdalena Woman has high cheekbones and a mysterious smile reminiscent of the Mona Lisa. She lived before the Ice Age, in a time when dogs had already been domesticated.
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