Archaeologists find oldest decapitated skull in South American hunter-gatherer mortuary ritual
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Skull found in Lapa do Santo, East Brazil could have been buried 9,000 years ago
© Mauricio de Paiva The head of the oldest decapitation ever found in the New World was pulled and twisted after being partially cut off, according to experts from the University of Dundee’s Centre for Anatomy and Human identification who analysed the South American find.
© Alberto Barioni © Andersen Lyrio Found with its hands covering its face in a pose described as “mysterious” by anthropologists, the remains, discovered at the Lapa do Santo site in eastern Brazil, have been dated to 9,000 years ago. The rest of the skeleton remains missing.
© Andre Strauss © Andre Strauss Professor Sue Black, the Director of the centre, compared the hunter-gatherer remains to a modern-day case of beheading. “We were the forensic team that identified the manner in which the decapitation most likely occurred,” she says.
© Andre Strauss © Andre Strauss “Examining the skull, we saw fractures consistent with hyperextension of the head and rotation. There would also have been cutting but the fracturing of the neck bones indicated a violence to the region.”
© Danilo Bernardo © Andre Strauss The next oldest known decapitation in South America occurred 6,000 years later in Peru. Historians previously believed hunter-gatherers possessed few tools capable of assisting such a gruesome act.
© Andre Strauss © Andre Strauss Archaeologists have ruled out the possibility of the head being used as a trophy. Signature isotopes in the man’s bones suggest he was a local rather than an outsider or rival, leading to speculation that the arrangement of his hands indicated a form of symbolic ritual.
© Andre Strauss © Andre Strauss André Strauss, from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, slowly uncovered the disembodied skull and hands, partially crushed as a result of being buried for thousands of years.
© Mauricio de Paiva © Andre Strauss “The result from the strontium isotope analysis is compatible with a scenario in which the ritualised decapitation was not a violent act against the enemy but instead part of a broader set of mortuary rituals involving a strong component of manipulation of the body,” he said, writing as a co-author on the report.
© LEEH-USP “The careful arrangement of the hands over the face is compatible with an important public display component in the ritual that could have worked to enhance social cohesion within the community.
© LEEH-USP “This ritualised burial attests to the early sophistication of mortuary rituals among hunter-gatherers in the Americas.
© Adriano Gambarini “In the apparent absence of wealth goods or elaborate architecture, Lagoa Santa’s inhabitants seemed to be using the human body to reify and express their cosmological principles concerning death.”
What do you think? Leave a comment below.Tower Museum, DerryThe permanent exhibition, An Armada shipwreck – La Trinidad Valencera, narrates the story of La
Trinidad Valencera, one of the largest ships in the Armada Fleet. In
1588 it foundered in Kinnagoe Bay in Co. Donegal during a violent storm
and was discovered nearly 400 years later by divers from the City of
Derry Sub Aqua Club. The display tells the story of the people
involved, the soldiers and sailors aboard the Trinidad Valencera and the
divers and archaeologists who discovered and excavated the ship.
Arbeia Roman Fort and Museum, South ShieldsLook out for some astonishing displays at this powerhouse of the Roman frontier: to name two, Roman Garden shows what herbs and plants were used by the Romans for cooking, medicine and decoration, and Roman Remains includes the headquarter buildings, barracks, granaries, gateways and latrines.
National Museum of Scotland, EdinburghCurrent exhibition Celts tells the story of the different peoples who have used or been given the
name ‘Celts’ through the stunning art objects that they made, including
intricately decorated jewellery, highly stylised objects of religious
devotion, and the decorative arts of the late 19th century which were
inspired by the past. Until October 25 2016.
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/archaeology/art537837-oldest-decapitated-skull-east-brazil-mortuary-ritual