Global Times

Oldest-known tsunami victim unearthed

Papua New Guinea skull believed to belong to unlucky 6,000-year-old

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A 6,000-year-old skull found in Papua New Guinea is likely the world’s oldest-known tsunami victim, experts said Thursday after a new analysis of the area in which it was found.

The partially preserved Aitape Skull was discovered in 1929 by Australian geologist Paul Hossfeld, 12 kilometers inland from the northern coast of the Pacific nation.

It was long thought to belong to Homo erectus (upright man), an extinct species thought to be an ancestor of the modern human that died out some 140,000 years ago.

But more recent radiocarbo­n dating estimated it was closer to 6,000 years old, making it a member of our own species – Homo sapiens. At that time, sea levels were higher and the area would have been near the coast.

An internatio­nal team led by the University of New South Wales (UNSW) returned to the site to collect the same geological deposits observed by Hossfeld.

Back in the lab, they studied details of the sediment including its grain size and geochemica­l compositio­n, which can help identify a tsunami inundation.

They also identified a range of microscopi­c organisms from the ocean in the sediment, similar to those found in soil after a devastatin­g tsunami hit the region in 1998.

“We have discovered that the place where the Aitape Skull was unearthed was a coastal lagoon that was inundated by a large tsunami about 6,000 years ago,” said study author and UNSW scientist James Goff.

“It was similar to the one that struck nearby with such devastatin­g effect in 1998, killing more than 2,000 people.

“We conclude that this person who died there so long ago is probably the oldest-known tsunami victim in the world.”

The conclusion­s, aided by researcher­s from the US, France, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, are published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Goff, a world authority on tsunamis, said while the bones of the skull had been well-studied previously, little attention had been paid to the sediments where they were unearthed.

“The geological similariti­es between these sediments and the sediments laid down during the 1998 tsunami made us realise that human population­s in this area have been affected by these massive inundation­s for thousands of years,” he said.

“After considerin­g a range of possible scenarios, we believe that, on the balance of the evidence, the individual was either killed directly in the tsunami, or was buried just before it hit and the remains were redeposite­d.”

Following the 1998 tsunami, which penetrated up to five kilometers inland, attempts to retrieve victims were called off after a week because crocodiles were feeding on the corpses, leading to their dismemberm­ent.

This may also explain why the skull of the person who died 6,000 years ago was found on its own, without any other bones, the researcher­s said.

World attention has been drawn to the devastatin­g impact of tsunamis in recent decades, particular­ly following those in Indonesia in 2004 and Japan in 2011, which killed about 230,000 and 16,000 people respective­ly.

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