Ancient Green Rocks in Spanish Cave Hint at 4,000-Year-Old Copper Craft

The Journey to Cova 338



The hike to Cova 338 is unforgiving. Starting at the Monastery of Núria in the eastern Pyrenees, already high above sea level, hikers must climb a steep slope for 45 minutes. At an elevation of 2,235 meters, the temperature drops significantly and the wind becomes relentless. Despite these harsh conditions, prehistoric people kept returning to this remote spot for over 4,000 years. Now, archaeologists believe they have uncovered the reason: copper.

Inside the cave, researchers discovered more than 170 fragments of vibrant green rock identified as probable malachite, a copper-rich mineral not naturally found in the area. This cache represents some of the earliest known evidence of copper mineral exploitation in Western Europe, according to a study published in Frontiers in Environmental Archaeology.

“For the first time in the Pyrenees, high-mountain prehistoric occupations of significant intensity have been documented, characterized by repeated activities and the direct exploitation of mineral resources within the cave,” said Carlos Tornero, professor in the Department of Prehistory at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona and lead author of the study.

An International Team Unearths History



An international team led by the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) and the Catalan Institute of Human Palaeoecology and Social Evolution (IPHES-CERCA) excavated the site between 2021 and 2023. Their work challenges a long-held belief that terrain above 2,000 meters was marginal ground, visited only sporadically by prehistoric communities.

Cova 338 preserved its history with unusual fidelity. The cavity measures just over 100 square meters, with two small chambers. Excavators managed to dig only the first six square meters near the entrance during the three field seasons. Even that narrow window produced an extraordinary archaeological sequence.

The team uncovered 23 fire pits, some cutting into earlier ones, alongside 333 ceramic fragments and abundant butchered animal bones. The combustion structures alone tell a story of return. People did not stumble on the cave repeatedly by accident. They arrived, built fires atop the ashes of previous visits, and left again, generation after generation, from the early 5th millennium BC to the late 1st millennium BC.

“We can’t say exactly how long people stayed each time, but the repeated use of the space and the density of remains suggest occupations that were short to medium in duration, but happening again and again over long periods of time,” Tornero told ZME Science.

A High-Altitude Worksite, Not a Shelter of Chance

The team interprets Cova 338 as a logistical station, a high-altitude mineral processing camp integrated into structured seasonal mobility systems. As Live Science reported, knowledge of the site and its resources was transmitted across generations.

“The mountain was not a barrier, but an active place within the economic and territorial organization of prehistoric communities,” said Eudald Carbonell, IPHES-CERCA researcher and co-author of the study.

Green Stone and Deliberate Fire



The most arresting finds are the malachite fragments. According to the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, malachite forms in the oxidized upper zones of copper deposits and has been used as a copper ore for millennia. The green chunks in Cova 338 were carried up from somewhere outside the cave, then heated inside it.

Malachite yields copper through a straightforward two-step process. Heating the green mineral releases carbon dioxide and transforms it into black copper oxide. Exposing that residue to charcoal strips away more carbon dioxide, leaving a small copper nugget behind. At Cova 338, many of the mineral fragments show clear signs of thermal alteration while other materials in the same layers do not, ruling out accidental burning.

“Many of these fragments are thermally altered, while other materials in the cave are not, which clearly suggests that fire played an important role in their processing and that there was a deliberate intention behind it,” said Julia Montes-Landa, an archaeologist at the University of Granada and study co-author. “In other words, they weren’t burned by accident.”

The most intensive use of the cave fell between 3600 and 2400 BC, squarely within the Copper Age, when communities across Europe were learning to extract and shape metal. The broader region holds copper-bearing geology, though archaeologists have not yet identified the specific extraction site that supplied Cova 338.

Ornaments, Remains, and Lingering Questions



Two personal ornaments recovered during the dig add texture to the picture. One pendant was cut from a marine shell of the genus Glycymeris, a type known from other Catalan sites. The second, far rarer, was shaped from a brown bear tooth, a choice that may carry specific symbolic weight.

Human remains were also found, including a baby tooth and a finger bone. The sample is too limited for firm conclusions, but the authors note the cave may have held a funerary role alongside its industrial one.

Much remains unresolved. The animal bones include sheep or goat, pig, canids, hare, and brown bear, but it is not yet clear whether people hunted game or brought meat with them. They ate, processed hides, and likely milked herds above 2,000 meters.

Excavating Where Machines Cannot Go



Reaching Cova 338 demands a long walk. The cave sits in the Núria Valley in the municipality of Queralbs, and motorized access is forbidden across the protected landscape. For three field seasons, the team carried every piece of equipment, every sample, and all excavated sediment down the mountain by hand.

The work employed high-resolution recording: 3D documentation of recovered materials, systematic sediment sampling, and flotation techniques to recover the smallest remains. The site has since been closed to the public to protect the deposits and enable continued research.

Future Discoveries



The team expects to expand the excavation, analyze pollen and plant remains, and locate the source of the copper minerals. Cova 338 has already established itself as a key site for understanding how prehistoric communities exploited high-mountain resources. The next field seasons may reveal exactly what those ancient climbers were chasing.

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