Broken skull hints at earliest homicide
MADRID
Scientists on May 27 said a fossilized skull discovered deep inside a Spanish cave shows telltale signs of homicide: two fractures inflicted by the same weapon. The skull, belonging to a primitive member of the Neanderthal lineage, was found in an apparent funerary site down a shaft in the appropriately bleak-sounding Sima de los Huesos, Spanish for “Pit of the Bones,” in the Atapuerca mountains.
The skull shows that modern humanity’s species, Homo sapiens, cannot claim a monopoly on murder. “This individual was killed in an act of lethal interpersonal violence, providing a window into an often-invisible aspect of the social life of our human ancestors,” said paleontologist Nohemi Sala.
This oldest-known example of murder occurred 230,000 years before Homo sapiens first appeared in Africa.
“Based on the similarities in shape and size of both the wounds, we believe they are the result of repeated blows with the same object and inflicted by another individual, perhaps in a face-to-face encounter,” Sala added.
Remains of nearly 30 individuals were found at the bottom of the 13-meter shaft. The murder victim suffered two penetrating fractures on the forehead’s left side, above the eye. Using forensic methods like those employed by police, the researchers interpreted the wounds, as evidence of blunt-force trauma occurring around the time of death.
Sala said the weapon may have been a wooden spear, stone spear tip or stone hand-axe. The presence of a notch at a similar location in the outlines of both fractures indicates they were caused by the same object. “Since either of these wounds would likely have been lethal, penetrating the brain, the presence of multiple wounds implies an intention to kill,” Sala said.