Evolution The violent spirit to forge a civilization vol 1

(Rodrigo GrandaB_hQJo) #1

─Murder in Atapuerca


Another case of interest is that of Atapuerca (^) [ 42 ], which is important because it


shows that both modern hominids, as well as those who preceded us, cemented the


continuous use of violence to refine social relations. At the Atapuerca site


(Burgos), a murder was discovered that is recorded in the fossil record, and whose


study on skull 17 from the "Sima de los Huesos" was published in the scientific


journal PLoS ONE (^) [ 43 ], finds it to be the oldest known case of intentional


homicide (not necessarily murder) in the history of mankind to date, since skull 17 ,


made up of 52 fragments recovered over 20 years of excavation ( 1990 - 2010 ), an


exemplary exercise in patience and perseverance, corresponds to an individual


who died at the beginning of his youth and arrived at the site 430. 000 years ago,


where he lies with 27 other individuals from the same period. The origin of this


accumulation of corpses in the “Sima de los Huesos” is one of the greatest


unknowns of world prehistory in recent years.


In the publication that you can consult on the internet, the mortal injuries


of the individual in question have been studied; whose skull shows two


perforations in the frontal bone, above the left ocular orbit. The study shows that


these two holes were most likely caused by the impact of a hard object before or


after the death of the individual. Where the significance of the study stands out is


that it concludes that both injuries were produced by the same object in two


different impacts and with different trajectories, which would rule out that either


or both of the injuries were the result of an accident or the same fall into the Sima.


The researchers therefore conclude that in all likelihood both punctures were


produced by another individual who struck him twice with what we might call "the


murder weapon".


The Atapuerca Research Team has defended the hypothesis that it could


be an accumulation of corpses by other humans. However, other researchers have


proposed different hypotheses which, little by little, after years of study, have been


discarded. This new work reaffirms the Atapuerca Research Team's hypothesis


that the accumulation of corpses was intentional. Thus, the “Sima de los Huesos”


would be the first cemetery or burial pit discovered to date. In the study of this


skull, the first signatory is Dr. Nohemí Sala, postdoctoral researcher 2014 at


the "Fundación Atapuerca" (^) [ 44 ], also adds clues to solve the mystery of the


unusual accumulation of corpses in the famous “Sima de los Huesos”.

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