Hunter-gatherers first launched violent raids at least 13,400 years ago

More than 8,000 years before the rise of Egyptian civilization, hunter-gatherers went on the attack in the Nile Valley.

Skeletons of adults, teens and children excavated in the 1960s at an ancient cemetery in Sudan known as Jebel Sahaba display injuries incurred in repeated skirmishes, raids or ambushes, say paleoanthropologist Isabelle Crevecoeur and her colleagues. The site, which dates to between 13,400 and 18,600 years ago, provides the oldest known evidence of regular, small-scale conflicts among human groups, says Crevecoeur, of the University of Bordeaux in France.

Although people buried at Jebel Sahaba don’t show signs of having fought in a one-time battle, they participated in an early form

→ Continue reading at Science News

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

Exploring the Investment Appeal of JPMorgan (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC)

Having weathered numerous challenges that tumultuously affected bank stocks earlier this year, is the coast clear to dive into this sector? Unfortunately, the answer...

An Hermès Heir Wants to Give Half His $12 Billion Fortune to His Gardener—and Lawyers Are Going Nuts

It's Succession meets Knives Out—only this Hollywood-like plot is real.Nicolas Puech, 80, the estranged Hermès heir, announced a bold plan to adopt his 51-year-old...

MacKenzie Scott donated $2.15 billion to hundreds of charities this past year | CNN Business

New York CNN  —  Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott is in the giving mood this holiday season. Scott announced...