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Experts reveal 'ancient massacre'

ramonmercado

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Experts reveal 'ancient massacre'

The Neolithic bones were discovered at Wayland's Smithy
Bones found at a prehistoric burial site indicate they belonged to victims of an ancient massacre, say scientists.
Remains of 14 people were discovered at Wayland's Smithy, near Uffington White Horse, Oxfordshire, in the 1960s.

Latest techniques date the bones at between 3590 BC and 3560 BC, and have led experts to believe the people may have died in a Neolithic Age massacre.

English Heritage carried out the work with the help of Cardiff University and the University of Central Lancashire.

Flint arrowhead

Michael Wysocki of the University of Central Lancashire says the findings suggest the Neolithic Age was more violent than previously thought.

This dating programme demands a revolution in our thinking about prehistory

Alex Bayliss
English Heritage

The victims - three of them probably killed by arrows - could have died in a rush for land or livestock, he added.

He said: "We know one person was shot through the lower abdomen because we have found the tiny tip of a flint arrowhead embedded in their pelvic bone.

"We also know that the bodies of two people were scavenged and partially dismembered by dogs or wolves before their remains were buried in the monument.

"All this new evidence suggests that the period between 3625 BC and 3590 BC may have been one of increasing social tension and upheaval."

Revealing comparisons

The research also indicates that the use of Neolithic long barrows was short-lived - and did not take place over hundreds of years as previously thought.

English Heritage radiocarbon dating expert Alex Bayliss said: "With this research, we can now think about the Neolithic period in terms of individuals and communities and make useful and revealing comparisons between their choices and behaviour in the remote past.

"This dating programme demands a revolution in our thinking about prehistory and not just that of early Neolithic burial monuments in southern Britain."


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/engl ... 439401.stm
 
I've been to Wayland's Smithy- very strange place, and quite a long walk from the nearest road. This massacre is a new discovery far as I know; interesting.

-edit; it says the remains were found in the 'sixties; but the idea of a massacre is what is new.
 
It's strange that nobody discovered the evidence of death by arrows before now. I would think that looking for a cause of death would be one of the first things you investigate surely.
There could be any number of reasons for it really, theft of cattle, inter-tribe conflict, trespassing...human warfare has gone on since, well, forever.
 
My missus, who studied archaeology at Uni in the Seventies, said that in those days the archaeologists believed in a largely peaceful society in the neolith/Bronze age; the tribes all living in hippy-type harmony as noble savages or something. But since that time plenty of evidence for violence and warfare has been found.
The same thing happened with Otzi; the Iceman from the top of the Alps. The first post-mortem indicated that he supposedly died of exhaustion or some other peaceful cause; it was only later they noticed the arrowhead in his shoulder.
 
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