A Stone Age graveyard offers insights into two poorly understood cultures
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Thursday, August 14th, 2008

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SAHARAN BURIALThe skeletons of a woman and two children are the first triple burial uncovered in Africa, researchers say. Preserved in this cast exactly as found, the skeletons were part of the oldest Stone Age graveyard in the Sahara.Full story.Mike Hettwer/Project Exploration Investigators searching for dinosaur fossils in the Sahara in 2000 suddenly took an unexpected and scientifically
exciting leap backward in time. They came upon a stretch of sand littered with
the bones of ancient people positioned in ways characteristic of intentional
burials.
Investigations of the bones and associated finds made since
that fateful discovery show that they come from the largest and oldest Stone
Age graveyard in the Sahara, team members report online in the Aug. 14 PLoS ONE. They also described their
findings August 14 during a press briefing held at the National Geographic
Society in Washington, D.C., which partly funded the excavations.
The Gobero archaeological site, which dates to as early as
10,000 years ago, lies in the western African nation of Niger. The area had already gained
fame earlier when excavation director and paleontologist Paul Sereno of the University of Chicago found 110-million-year-old
dinosaur fossils nearby.
Work at Gobero indicates that two successive human populations
divided by 1,000 years lived by a lake, perhaps seasonally, during a time of regular
Saharan rainfall. These hunter-gatherer groups buried their dead in separate
gravesites by the lake, leaving an unprecedented biological and material record
of their poorly understood cultures.
Although hunter-gatherer groups are typically mobile and
small in number, those living in resource-rich areas tend to stay for long
periods at seasonal sites, comments anthropologist Henry Harpending of the University of Utah
in Salt Lake City.
“It’s interesting that at Gobero these ancient populations became dense enough
to require large cemeteries,” he says.
Excavation seasons in 2005 and 2006 have revealed 200
graves. Human and animal bones, as well as bone artifacts, have yielded 78
radiocarbon dates, which are based on ratios of different isotopes of carbon in
the bones and artifacts.
“I’ve never seen an archaeological site that’s as
exceptional as Gobero is,” archaeologist and team member Elena Garcea of the University of Cassino
in Italy
said at the press briefing.
The older Gobero group, members of the Kiffian culture,
hunted large game and speared two-meter-long perch with bone harpoons. They
colonized the Sahara from 10,000 to 8,000
years ago, when heavy rains created a deep lake at Gobero. Pottery pieces at
the site are decorated with zigzags and wavy lines already linked to the
Kiffians, Garcea says.
Kiffians buried dead individuals with their legs pulled up
tightly against their body, suggesting that the deceased were bound up with
some type of wrapping. Both adult males and females often reached two meters in
height.
The later Gobero residents, from the Tenerian culture, hunted
small game using tiny stone arrowheads, caught small catfish and tilapia and
herded cattle. The Tenerians inhabited the site from 7,200 to 4,200 years ago,
when it featured a shallow lake. Parallel lines of impressed dots cover
Tenerian pottery. Tenerians were shorter and had slighter builds than Kiffians
did.
Tenerians often buried their dead with jewelry and placed
them in ritual poses. The 4,800-year-old skeleton of a girl lying on her side,
with arms and legs slightly bent, includes an upper-arm bracelet carved from a
hippo’s tusk. Based on her bone development, the researchers estimate that the
girl was 11 years old when she died.
The most striking find occurred in 2006, when the
researchers uncovered what they say is Africa’s
first triple burial. A petite, 40-year-old Tenerian woman lay on her side,
facing two children, an 8-year-old and a 5-year-old. Their entwined arms reached
out and their hands clasped in what Sereno’s team calls the “Stone Age
embrace.” These individuals died from undetermined causes 5,300 years ago.
Found in: Archaeology, Humans and Life
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