14,000 Year Old Siberian Cannibalism

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From the Siberian Times, and reported by the Archeology News Network. (Here's the link to the original story: siberiantimes.com/science/casestudy/features/the-siberian-jaw-that-could-unlock-our-genetic-secrets-first-exclusive-picture/).

"Embedded in a hillside where it has lain for around 14,000 years, the adult jaw from Afontova mountain on the outskirts of Krasnoyarsk was found alongside the bones of animals and ancient tools.
Detailed DNA analysis, probably in Germany, will indicate to experts the age, gender, race (Caucasian or Mongoloid or a mix), and even possible diseases from ancient times.
Scientists will examine the jaw, which includes teeth, for evidence of ancient cannibalism, an initial suspicion which they cannot immediately confirm, but also for the possibility that mammoth meat was part of his diet.
These human remains did not lie in a grave but alongside the remnants of animals that were butchered, said research fellow Ivan Stasyuk. 'Why cannibalism? Because this jaw lies alongside weapons and chipped of bones of large ungulates,' he said, surmising that this human was slaughtered, and eaten, too.
'I would not jump to the conclusion of cannibalism,' countered his colleague Leonid Galuhin, also a research fellow at the company 'Krasnoyarsk Geoarheologiya', the deputy leader of excavation. 'For now the jaw has been taken to a Novosibirsk laboratory for all analyses, including trasological analysis, which will allow us to say for sure if there act of cannibalism or not.'The jaw is likely to be sent to the world famous Max Plank laboratory in Germany for a full scale DNA analysis.
'Findings of the bones of Paleolithic man are very rare,' said Galuhin. 'There are not many such findings in the world. To us, these are extremely rare discoveries. This jaw is really unique because it is perfectly preserved. We can glean a lot of data: age, gender, race, even some diseases this person might have suffered from.
'And it can enable us to research early colonisation of Siberia by ancient humans, and the connections of Siberian inhabitants to other regions. Besides, the more anthropological material of this time we find all over the world, the more information we learn about ancient people. Previously in Siberia and the Far East were made single finds, the best material was from burials on our sites called Malta and Buret.'
'Still we had only the jaws of two children. Now we have a third one and in the best condition, with its teeth preserved. The teeth are important to extract DNA.'
'This site, an ancient camp, has been researched since the late 19th century and has given us a lot of material, not just debris, but thousands of complete stone and bone tools. During our current excavations we hope to find probably not the same amount, but very close to this. Apart from stone and bone tools, we found a set of stone beads and some pieces of art including a triangular plate made of mammoth tusk with plotted points. It was probably a pendant.'
The site is, in fact, a complex of ancient camps.
Afontova gora (mountain) 2 has two parts. One is an area where butchered animal carcasses have been found, along with tools for dissecting meat.
'So we see everything as it was left by the ancient people. The other part of this ancient camp is a slope, which was formed by landslides. It is hard to see any structure there, very hard to work. We must constantly consult with geologists and think how to work in the best way. This jaw was found here. We managed to date the jaw using other finds nearby. I think that after full analysis we will know the date for sure.' 'In March, we found mammoth teeth here. It is a rather common finding for that period. You need to understand this epoch. People lived along the boundary of glaciers, in our case this border was on the line of modern day Turukhansk' - some 1,475 kilometres to the north of present day Krasnoyarsk at the confluence of the Yenisey and Nizhnyaya Tunguska Rivers.
'The area of modern Krasnoyarsk was like Arctic tundra,' said Mr Galuhin. 'There were a lot of animals near the boundary of the glacier, and ancient man followed the animals along the routes of their migration and explored new territories. Among these animals were the mammoths, too, so it goes without saying for Paleolithic archaeology that people hunted these creatures too.'
Mammoth meat was part of the diet of these Siberians, he is certain. 'The climate was quite severe here, akin to modern Taymyr, for example.'
The current excavation covering 10,000 metres is being conducted because of the construction of a new bridge - the fourth - across the Yenisei River in Kransoyarsk.
The main contractor is the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The company Krasnoyarsk Geoarheologiya Limited works alongside them. This 'rescue excavation' - expected to bring a wealth of new finds - may lead to the the creation of a special museum dedicated to this site, a long-held dream of archeologists.
The site is on the right bank of the river and over many years bone and antler tools as well as items of personal adornment have been recovered. Fauna remains include mammoth, reindeer, sheep, horse, aurochs/bison, ibex, saiga antelope, red deer, hares, arctic foxes and wolves."
 
The Atkins Diet on steroids...mammoth and other humans. Not surprising, perhaps, though. Scientists have found evidence for it very far into human history, and with sproradic instances even in the very recent past.
 
Until recently there were cannibals in Africa and Southeast Asia especially in the Colonial period. All those jokes and cartoons about being boiled in a pot were not based only on imagination.
 
In Papua New Guinea ritual cannibalism of closest of keen dead was only stopped recently when scientists discover that mystery brain disease (Kuru) was caused by pathogen similar to Mead Cow sickness, bad self replicating proteins. Somehow locals believed scientists and stopped the ritual, and disease is almost gone from the tribe now.

Alpers and Lindenbaum's research conclusively demonstrated that kuru spread easily and rapidly in the Fore people due to the irendocannibalistic funeral practices, in which relatives consumed the bodies of the deceased to return the "life force" of the deceased to the hamlet, a Fore societal subunit.[16]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuru_(disease)
 
So, "long pig" is no longer on the menu in New Guinea? Michael Rockefeller will probably be pleased to hear that.
 
Old Irish practiced ritual cannibalism. So did Serbs.

The earliest find of cannibalism in Europe stems back to approximately 800 thousand years ago in Spain. Evidence of cannibalism was found in the Gran Dolina Cave; where the remains of human bones were found mixed in together with animal bones. Closer examination verified that the human bones were eaten by other humans and it was suggested that it was to satisfy nutritional needs (Carbonell et al, 2010).In Gough’s Cave in Somerset, England; 4 bodies were found and all of them had extensive human teeth marks on their bones. The bones were around 14,700 years old. It is believed that the cannibalism was ritualistic and not just for nutritional needs as the team also found drinking bowls made from human skulls (huffingtonpost.com).
Pits around Herxheim, Germany show signs of cannibalism on a large scale. At least 10 bodies were examined and the evidence was conclusive: around 7000 years ago cannibalism was occurring (Bower, 2010). It is suggested that hundreds of people were eaten over a few decades. This means cannibalism was a part of a social cultural norm at this place in time.
A bit closer to our modern time in Domuztepe, Turkey; a large “death pit” was found and is believed to stem from about 5,800 to 5,450 BC. In the pit, both animal and human bones were found and the remains that were examined indicated cannibalism.
 

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