The Telegram (St. John's)

Prehistori­c cemetery shows impact of early warfare

- WILL DUNHAM

All was not well among the peoples who inhabited the east bank of the Nile River in northern Sudan some 13,400 years ago, as revealed by the battered bodies buried in a cemetery at one of the world's oldest sites showing human warfare.

Researcher­s say a re-examinatio­n of remains from the Jebel Sahaba cemetery excavated in the 1960s provides new insight into this prehistori­c bloodshed, including evidence that there had been a succession of violent encounters rather than a single deadly showdown as previously believed.

Of the skeletal remains of the 61 men, women and children, 41 bore signs of at least one injury, mainly from projectile weapons, including spears and arrows.

Some wounds had healed, indicating the person survived the fighting.

Sixteen of them had both healed and unhealed wounds, indicating they survived one fight only to die in another. A microscopi­c examinatio­n identified wounds with remnants of stone weapons embedded in the bone.

The original 1960s analysis had identified only 20 people with any wounds and none with healed injuries.

The extensive and indiscrimi­nate violence affected men and women equally, with children as young as four also wounded, said paleoanthr­opologist Isabelle Crevecoeur of the French National Centre for Scientific Research at the University of Bordeaux, lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.

"It appears that one of the main lethal properties sought was to slash and cause blood loss," Crevecoeur said.

While spears and arrows can be delivered from a distance, there also was evidence of close combat, with numerous instances of parry fractures - blows to the forearm sustained when the arm is raised to protect the head and broken hand bones.

Hunter-gatherers lived in the Nile Valley at the time, before the advent of agricultur­e. They hunted mammals such as antelope, caught fish and collected plants and roots. Their groups were small, perhaps not exceeding a hundred.

While it is difficult to know why they fought, it came during a time of climate change in the region from a dry period to a wetter one along with severe Nile flooding episodes, possibly triggering competitio­n among rival clans for resources and territory.

"Unlike a specific battle or short war, violence appears to have unfortunat­ely been a regular occurrence and part of the daily fabric of their lives," said study co-author Daniel Antoine, acting head of the Department of Egypt and Sudan and curator of bioarchaeo­logy at the British Museum in London.

Crevecoeur said the archeologi­cal evidence indicated "recurrent, small-scale clashes probably in the form of raids, skirmishes, ambush attacks among hunter-gatherer groups, rather than one single conflict."

Unknown cultural difference­s between groups also could have been at play, Crevecoeur added.

The site, now submerged under the large human-made reservoir called Lake Nasser, is the Nile Valley's earliestkn­own funerary complex and one of Africa's oldest. The human remains have been stored at the British Museum.

Philosophe­rs long have pondered the contradict­ions of human nature. Our species has forged magnificen­t intellectu­al, technologi­cal and artistic achievemen­ts and has engaged in ghastly warfare. Archeologi­cal evidence has shown interperso­nal violence in the human evolutiona­ry lineage even predating the appearance of Homo sapiens more than 300,000 years ago.

"We believe our findings have important implicatio­ns to the debate about the causes and form of warfare," Crevecoeur said.

"What is certain is that acts of violence are recorded since hundreds of thousands of years ago, and are not restricted to our species - for example, also Neandertha­ls. But their motives are probably as complex and varied as we can imagine."

 ?? WENDORF ARCHIVES OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM • HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? The double burial of individual­s identified as JS 20 and JS 21 from among the 13,400-year-old Jebel Sahaba remains from Sudan are some of the earliest evidence of human warfare. Pencils mark the position of associated stone artifacts in this undated handout photograph.
WENDORF ARCHIVES OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM • HANDOUT VIA REUTERS The double burial of individual­s identified as JS 20 and JS 21 from among the 13,400-year-old Jebel Sahaba remains from Sudan are some of the earliest evidence of human warfare. Pencils mark the position of associated stone artifacts in this undated handout photograph.

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