Cape Argus

Docs dig up evidence of ritualised beheading

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AUCT academic has taken part in an internatio­nal study which discovered a 9 000-year-old case of human decapitati­on in Brazil.

UCT’s Dr Domingo Carlos Salazar Garcia is one of the authors of the study, led by Andre Strauss from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Germany, published in PLOS ONE earlier this week.

Researcher­s discovered the remains of a buried body, Burial 26, which contained a cranium, jaw, the first six cervical vertebrae, and two severed hands at the Lapa do Santo rock shelter in 2007. The amputated hands were laid over the face of the skull and the researcher­s observed V-shaped cut marks on the jaw and sixth cervical vertebra.

The authors believe that the presentati­on of the remains suggests ritualised decapitati­on instead of trophy-taking. If this is the case, the remains may demonstrat­e sophistica­ted mortuary rituals among huntergath­erers in the Americas during that period.

The study challenges the traditiona­l view that decapitati­on was an Andean phenomenon, since all other

DE archaeolog­ical cases were found in the Andes.

It also challenges the Western perspectiv­e, which understand­s decapitati­on within the context of punishment and inter-group violence.

“The strontium analysis comparing Burial 26’s isotopic signature to other specimens from Lapa do Santo suggests Burial 26 was likely a local member of the group and not a foreign defeated enemy,” Garcia said.

Using accelerato­r mass spectromet­ry, the researcher­s dated the remains back to about 9 000 years ago, making it the oldest case of decapitati­on in South America

The study is expected to lead to the re-evaluation of previous interpreta­tions of the practice.

“This ritualised case of decapitati­on from Lapa do Santo attests to the early sophistica­tion of mortuary rituals among hunter-gatherers in the Americas. The absence of a punitive element provides a venue for the exercise of a radical notion of alterity. 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,” Strauss said. – Staff Writer

 ?? PICTURE: MAURÍCIO
PAIVA ?? DISCOVERY: The cranium of the decapitate­d head that was found in the Lapa do Santo rock shelter in Brazil.
PICTURE: MAURÍCIO PAIVA DISCOVERY: The cranium of the decapitate­d head that was found in the Lapa do Santo rock shelter in Brazil.

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