850,000-Year-Old Child Cannibalism Uncovered at Gran Dolina Cave
- Archaeologists found a human neck bone of a child aged two to four at Gran Dolina cave in Burgos, Spain, with clear butchery marks indicating decapitation.
- The precision of the cut marks suggests significant skill in processing the child, likening it to the treatment of prey.
- Experts indicate this evidence shows that early humans exploited their peers as a food resource and may have used cannibalism for territorial control.
- The findings demonstrate a continuity in behavior, suggesting that the treatment of the dead was not exceptional, but repeated.
17 Articles
17 Articles
Scientist Just Learned Our Ancestors Ate Toddlers
Roughly 850,000 years ago, someone looked at a toddler and saw dinner. That’s the conclusion researchers have drawn after analyzing a child’s neck bone found in the Gran Dolina cave system in northern Spain. The bone, belonging to a 2- to 5-year-old Homo antecessor, shows precise cut marks—signs of decapitation and defleshing. In other words, this poor kid got butchered and eaten. “This case is particularly striking,” said Palmira Saladié, co-di…
Creepy evidence has been found that our ancient ancestors ate children 850,000 years ago. Cut marks on vertebrae found in the Gran Dolina cave prove cannibalism.
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