Ancient human relative cannibalized toddlers
Around 850,000 years ago, a toddler was decapitated and cannibalized, cut marks on one of their neck bones suggest.
The bone, which belonged to an archaic human relative, was found at the Gran Dolina cave at the archaeological site of Atapuerca in northern Spain. An analysis of the bone indicates that the child was between 2 and 5 years old when they died.
“This case is particularly striking, not only because of the child’s age, but also due to the precision of the cut marks,” Palmira Saladié, co-director of the Gran Dolina excavation, said in a statement. “It is direct evidence that the child was processed like any other prey.” The research team excavated a set of 10 skeletons this month, many of which show defleshing cuts and intentional fractures typically found on the bones of animals that were eaten.
All of the newly uncovered skeletons belonged to Homo antecessor, a species of archaic human that went extinct around 770,000 years ago. H. antecessor has only been identified at the Atapuerca site, so its position in the human family tree is unclear. Since it was discovered in 1997, experts have debated whether this ancient human group was the ancestor of Neanderthals and humans or whether it was an offshoot of the human lineage. Either way, H. antecessor is the earliest human relative found in Europe.
Gran Dolina cave has already revealed more than two dozen examples of human cannibalism over three decades of excavation at the site. And roughly 30% of the bones found in the cave so far have cut marks that suggest these early humans were eaten. “The preservation of the fossil surfaces is extraordinary,” Saladié told Live Science in an email. “The cut marks on the bones do not appear in isolation. Human bite marks have been identified on the bones — this is the most reliable evidence that the bodies found at the site were indeed consumed.”
The newfound skeletons reinforce the idea that early humans used their companions as a food resource and perhaps as a means of controlling territory, the researchers said. “What we are documenting now is the continuity of that [cannibalism] behaviour,” Saladié said. “The treatment of the dead was not exceptional, but repeated.”