Cova 338: Ancient High-Altitude Malachite Processing Site Uncovered in the Pyrenees

July 13, 2026
Cova 338: Ancient High-Altitude Malachite Processing Site Uncovered in the Pyrenees
  • Researchers urge cautious interpretation, suggesting that Cova 338 was used for malachite processing rather than metallurgical smelting, and highlight it as one of the earliest high-altitude, organized resource activities in Western Europe.

  • Ongoing excavations are probing unexplored back chambers and deeper layers to uncover more about the site’s use and the people who inhabited it.

  • The dig led by Professor Carlos Tornero uncovered 23 hearths across occupation layers spanning roughly two millennia, with more than 200 green mineral fragments showing deliberate thermal alteration.

  • Found a child’s tooth and a finger bone from an estimated eleven-year-old, suggesting Cova 338 may have functioned as a burial site at times, though its relationship to the processing area remains uncertain.

  • The site challenges the idea that high-altitude environments were marginal for prehistoric life, showing that alpine areas were integrated into long-term economic practices rather than visited only briefly.

  • Cova 338, a high-altitude cave in the Pyrenees at 2,235 metres, reveals centuries of repeated visits by communities to work with green malachite stones near the summit.

  • Analyses confirm the mineral is malachite and that heating was part of a processing activity, but there is no definitive evidence of copper smelting due to missing temperatures and equipment.

Summary based on 1 source


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