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Neolithic Skeletons In Croatia Suggest Mass Killing, Not Warfare
Live Science
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2 weeks ago
A mass grave in Croatia holds dozens of skeletons, and genetic information reveals new clues about how they died.
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00:00
About 6,000 years ago during the Stone Age in what is now Croatia,
00:04
dozens of people were murdered and buried together in a mass grave.
00:08
And archaeologists have new clues about what may have happened.
00:16
The pit was discovered in 2007 when a man in a small village was building a new garage.
00:24
And there'd been a lot of rain that summer.
00:26
The rain exposed a pit with about 41 skeletons.
00:32
And luckily there were archaeologists from the University of Zagreb in Croatia working on a survey nearby.
00:38
So they were able to get to the pit and inspect it almost immediately.
00:42
Just from their initial analysis, they were able to tell that this was not a contemporary massacre.
00:49
This wasn't something that had happened in modern times because first they looked for objects in the pit.
00:54
If it were a contemporary massacre, they would probably have found something like bullets or modern clothing.
01:00
And they didn't find any of that.
01:02
Then they also checked the skulls for dental fillings.
01:07
Didn't find any of those either.
01:09
And then they found some pieces of what looked like prehistoric pottery.
01:12
And so they already suspected that this massacre was quite old.
01:18
And then when they radiocarbon dated the skeletons and soil from the pit and the fragments of pottery,
01:24
they found that indeed this was something that had happened around 4200 BCE.
01:30
Recently, researchers conducted further analysis of the skeletons as well as genetic analysis
01:37
to try and figure out more about who these people may have been and what might have happened to them.
01:42
And to find out what they learned, I talked to the lead author of a new study, Mario Novak,
01:47
the head of the Laboratory for Evolutionary Anthropology and Bioarchaeology
01:51
at the Institute for Anthropological Research in Zagreb, Croatia.
01:55
We took them to the bioecological laboratory and gave them like a preliminary analysis.
02:01
First, we saw a couple of injuries that resembled typical gunshots to the back of the head, typical executions.
02:07
So we thought this is something, let's call it forensic.
02:10
We took samples of human bones for direct radiocarbon dating.
02:14
The samples from the top of the pit, in the middle point of the pit,
02:18
and from the bottom of the pit to get different, basically, layers.
02:23
All three samples basically gave the same result.
02:26
They all overlapped, dated to 4200 BCE.
02:31
So basically, that confirmed its archaeological context, not forensic.
02:35
And that couple of pottery fragments that I mentioned, basically, they can be dated to the same time,
02:41
to the so-called Lassinia, copyrighted Lassinia culture.
02:45
We thought this is either a result of some kind of a massacre,
02:49
or it could be maybe some kind of, these people died of some kind of infectious disease.
02:55
We all know about the Black Death Plague in the 14th century medieval Europe,
02:59
where people were dying like flies and they were just, you know, the victims were just thrown into mass burials.
03:04
So, these were two main scenarios.
03:07
But after the analysis, when we saw a lot of these injuries, most of the back of the head,
03:13
the injuries that were the direct cause of death, the only plausible scenario was a massacre.
03:21
And afterwards, when we looked at the sex of the deceased and their age of death,
03:26
we noticed that both sex, males and females, were involved.
03:31
The youngest individual was about three years old.
03:34
The youngest victim, basically, was about three years old.
03:37
And the oldest one was around 50 years of age.
03:40
So we have all age groups, both sexes.
03:44
We didn't see any facial injuries, no defensive injuries whatsoever.
03:48
And in these face-to-face combats, most of the victims are adult males,
03:54
males between 20 and 40 years of age.
03:56
And in this case, we didn't have any defensive wounds, no facial injuries,
04:00
only the injuries on the back of the head.
04:02
So how do you make the jump from figuring out that aspect of what you're looking at
04:08
to what might have led to that kind of indiscriminate killing in that kind of ancient society?
04:14
Since this is an ancient massacre, it happened over 6,000 years ago,
04:19
obviously, we don't have any written records about this time.
04:23
We don't have, obviously, any witnesses.
04:26
So we only have what we call circumstantial, basically, evidence.
04:31
And the problem is we only have, the archaeological context is very, very scarce.
04:36
We only have the skeletons of the victims.
04:39
We don't have anything, anything on, nor any objects that might belong to the attackers.
04:47
So this is a very hard thing to hypothesize what might be the cause.
04:55
Once researchers had ruled out all these other possibilities, what was left?
04:59
Well, they think that the likeliest explanation is probably one that has been applied
05:03
to similar mass graves dating to about 5,000 years ago in Germany and Austria,
05:09
which is that climate change, or perhaps a sudden population boom, was responsible.
05:17
So in a large, stable, generally homogenous population,
05:22
a drought or flooding or something that upset the balance of what resources were available to them
05:30
may have led to internal squabbling over precious resources that they needed to survive.
05:35
And that could have led to a deadly encounter and even a slaughter,
05:40
such as the one that happened in Croatia 6,000 years ago.
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