Evidence for lethal interpersonal violence
in the Middle Pleistocene
Evidence
of interpersonal violence between humans resulting is (perhaps surprisingly)
rare in the Pleistocene. Examples include the Shanidar 3 and St. Césaire 1 Neanderthals,
from Iraq and southwestern France respectively. Shanidar 3 suffered a
penetrating injury from a projectile weapon, and St. Césaire 1 suffered a
fractured skull consistent with a deliberate blow from a sharp object. It
cannot be ruled out that the injuries were the result of accidents: a hunting
injury in the case of Shanidar 3 and a fall in the case of St. Césaire 1
(though the location of the injury at the apex rather than side of the cranial
vault makes this unlikely). Neither incident was fatal, at least not
immediately so, as both lived long enough thereafter for healing to begin. There
are also cases where bones have been de-fleshed and broken open to extract marrow,
suggesting cannibalism – although it is unclear whether individuals were attacked
and killed, or whether they were already dead and possibly eaten by their
companions.
The
430,000-year-old site of Sima de los Huesos (‘Cave of Bones’) in northern Spain
has yielded a large number of human remains described as either Homo heidelbergensis or as
proto-Neanderthals. The remains were found in a deep pit into which they were
intentionally dropped, either as part of a mortuary ritual or more likely as a
means of hygienically disposing of dead bodies.
Cranium
17 is a very complete cranium recovered in 52 pieces. It comprises the entire
face, including much of the upper dentition (upper right C to M3 and upper left
C to M2), the frontal bone, most of the sphenoid bone, the left parietal bone,
the left temporal bone minus the mastoid process, and most of the occipital
bone. The slight dental wear suggests that Cranium 17 belonged to a young
adult.
Most
of the fragmentation of the cranium involved dry bone breakage occurring long
after death.
However, there were two unhealed depressed fractures consistent with
blunt force trauma from the same weapon (or ‘tool’ as the paper euphemistically
describes it), resulting in penetration of the bone-brain barrier. Either injury
would probably have been fatal: two suggests an intention to kill. Furthermore,
the presence of two injuries caused by impact with the same object more or less
rules out post-mortem damage to the cranium caused by it landing on a hard
object when it was dropped into the pit, or by subsequent rock-falls.
Cranium
17 represent the earliest reasonably clear-cut case of interpersonal violence
between humans leading to death. It demonstrates that this rather depressing
aspect of human behaviour has an ancient origin.
References:
1.
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Sala, N. et al., Lethal Interpersonal Violence in
the Middle Pleistocene. PLoS One (2015).
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1 comment:
Thank you for taking the time to write: "Humans: from the Beginning: From the First Apes to the First Cities," it is very comprehensive and look forward to reading it. I found it doing research on recent publications after last night's program on Nova about the recent discovery of Homo Naledi.
Human evolution and development, including contemporary processes, is a core interest of mine. I am currently working on a book on such topics. I will be using your book as reference.
Bernardo A Merizalde, MD, Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry & Human Behavior, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia
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