The Prague Post - World's oldest-known burial site found in S.Africa: scientists

EUR -
AED 4.304901
AFN 72.676735
ALL 95.387569
AMD 434.68209
ANG 2.0981
AOA 1076.078103
ARS 1660.383579
AUD 1.630567
AWG 2.112888
AZN 1.990027
BAM 1.953472
BBD 2.363015
BDT 144.338026
BGN 1.955346
BHD 0.442316
BIF 3483.77353
BMD 1.172198
BND 1.493778
BOB 8.10734
BRL 5.847046
BSD 1.173192
BTN 110.448817
BWP 15.796381
BYN 3.294916
BYR 22975.087883
BZD 2.362016
CAD 1.596499
CDF 2725.361441
CHF 0.920897
CLF 0.026644
CLP 1048.651529
CNY 7.998085
CNH 8.002809
COP 4229.12758
CRC 533.083039
CUC 1.172198
CUP 31.063257
CVE 110.59703
CZK 24.353183
DJF 208.323134
DKK 7.472175
DOP 69.423424
DZD 155.241317
EGP 61.594684
ERN 17.582975
ETB 183.195398
FJD 2.57743
FKP 0.868444
GBP 0.865874
GEL 3.141302
GGP 0.868444
GHS 13.022886
GIP 0.868444
GMD 85.570202
GNF 10286.040401
GTQ 8.969313
GYD 245.457545
HKD 9.186677
HNL 31.18078
HRK 7.534773
HTG 153.612218
HUF 364.260673
IDR 20186.896861
ILS 3.487818
IMP 0.868444
INR 110.349992
IQD 1536.981845
IRR 1541440.845673
ISK 143.40701
JEP 0.868444
JMD 185.215641
JOD 0.831088
JPY 186.862481
KES 151.389553
KGS 102.48612
KHR 4699.931445
KMF 492.323375
KPW 1054.978519
KRW 1728.746575
KWD 0.360709
KYD 0.977743
KZT 537.514154
LAK 25709.696674
LBP 105063.864056
LKR 373.388305
LRD 215.286248
LSL 19.33541
LTL 3.461197
LVL 0.709051
LYD 7.44207
MAD 10.844595
MDL 20.308976
MGA 4876.231718
MKD 61.634651
MMK 2461.526297
MNT 4192.356564
MOP 9.470816
MRU 46.84878
MUR 54.753646
MVR 18.110052
MWK 2034.436776
MXN 20.381188
MYR 4.633111
MZN 74.915445
NAD 19.335327
NGN 1594.24821
NIO 43.18021
NOK 10.895889
NPR 176.721472
NZD 1.982393
OMR 0.450714
PAB 1.173202
PEN 4.091026
PGK 5.095125
PHP 71.26263
PKR 327.01196
PLN 4.248774
PYG 7391.256598
QAR 4.28869
RON 5.088985
RSD 117.388332
RUB 87.767998
RWF 1719.402723
SAR 4.396775
SBD 9.430696
SCR 16.330719
SDG 703.918334
SEK 10.813079
SGD 1.493797
SHP 0.875164
SLE 28.865349
SLL 24580.409045
SOS 670.521115
SRD 43.799219
STD 24262.139422
STN 24.471782
SVC 10.265856
SYP 129.557202
SZL 19.319229
THB 37.965148
TJS 11.019571
TMT 4.108555
TND 3.413233
TOP 2.822373
TRY 52.774125
TTD 7.966576
TWD 36.880285
TZS 3044.78379
UAH 51.742492
UGX 4364.799475
USD 1.172198
UYU 46.664401
UZS 14165.122688
VES 566.364823
VND 30897.976608
VUV 138.541593
WST 3.198351
XAF 655.195917
XAG 0.015565
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.167925
XCG 2.114499
XDR 0.814853
XOF 655.170795
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.744858
ZAR 19.403792
ZMK 10551.19272
ZMW 22.203829
ZWL 377.447394
  • CMSC

    -0.0550

    22.895

    -0.24%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    15.23

    -0.79%

  • BCC

    0.2100

    84.36

    +0.25%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    87.39

    -0.03%

  • BCE

    -0.2720

    23.608

    -1.15%

  • RIO

    0.6200

    100.23

    +0.62%

  • BTI

    -0.6200

    57.47

    -1.08%

  • RELX

    -0.0850

    36.445

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64.94

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.87

    -0.16%

  • GSK

    -0.0550

    54.385

    -0.1%

  • AZN

    -2.1000

    187.65

    -1.12%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    15.52

    -0.71%

  • CMSD

    -0.0010

    23.319

    -0%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    46.11

    -0.3%

World's oldest-known burial site found in S.Africa: scientists
World's oldest-known burial site found in S.Africa: scientists / Photo: Luca Sola - AFP

World's oldest-known burial site found in S.Africa: scientists

Palaeontologists in South Africa said Monday they have found the oldest known burial site in the world, containing remains of a small-brained distant relative of humans previously thought incapable of complex behaviour.

Text size:

Led by renowned palaeoanthropologist Lee Berger, researchers said they discovered several specimens of Homo naledi -- a tree-climbing, Stone Age hominid -- buried about 30 metres (100 feet) underground in a cave system within the Cradle of Humankind, a UNESCO world heritage site near Johannesburg.

"These are the most ancient interments yet recorded in the hominin record, earlier than evidence of Homo sapiens interments by at least 100,000 years," the scientists wrote in a series of yet to be peer reviewed and preprint papers to be published in eLife.

The findings challenge the current understanding of human evolution, as it is normally held that the development of bigger brains allowed for the performing of complex, "meaning-making" activities such as burying the dead.

The oldest burials previously unearthed, found in the Middle East and Africa, contained the remains of Homo sapiens -- and were around 100,000 years old.

Those found in South Africa by Berger, whose previous announcements have been controversial, and his fellow researchers, date back to at least 200,000 BC.

Critically, they also belong to Homo naledi, a primitive species at the crossroads between apes and modern humans, which had brains about the size of oranges and stood about 1.5 metres (five feet) tall.

With curved fingers and toes, tool-wielding hands and feet made for walking, the species discovered by Berger had already upended the notion that our evolutionary path was a straight line.

Homo naledi is named after the "Rising Star" cave system where the first bones were found in 2013.

The oval-shaped interments at the centre of the new studies were also found there during excavations started in 2018.

The holes, which researchers say evidence suggests were deliberately dug and then filled in to cover the bodies, contain at least five individuals.

"These discoveries show that mortuary practices were not limited to H. sapiens or other hominins with large brain sizes," the researchers said.

The burial site is not the only sign that Homo naledi was capable of complex emotional and cognitive behaviour, they added.

- Brain size -

Engravings forming geometrical shapes, including a "rough hashtag figure", were also found on the apparently purposely smoothed surfaces of a cave pillar nearby.

"That would mean not only are humans not unique in the development of symbolic practices, but may not have even invented such behaviours," Berger told AFP in an interview.

Such statements are likely to ruffle some feathers in the world of palaeontology, where the 57-year-old has previously faced accusations of lacking scientific rigour and rushing to conclusions.

Many balked when in 2015 Berger, whose earlier discoveries won support from National Geographic, first aired the idea that Homo naledi was capable of more than the size of its head suggested.

"That was too much for scientists to take at that time. We think it's all tied up with this big brain," he said.

"We're about to tell the world that's not true."

While requiring further analysis, the discoveries "alter our understandings of human evolution", the researchers wrote.

"Burial, meaning-making, even 'art' could have a much more complicated, dynamic, non-human history than we previously thought," said Agustin Fuentes, a professor of anthropology at Princeton University, who co-authored the studies.

Carol Ward, an anthropologist at the University of Missouri not involved in the research, said that "these findings, if confirmed, would be of considerable potential importance".

"I look forward to learning how the disposition of remains precludes other possible explanations than intentional burial, and to seeing the results once they have been vetted by peer review," she told AFP.

Ward also pointed out that the paper acknowledged that it could not rule out that markings on the walls could have been made by later hominins.

D.Dvorak--TPP