Department of Archaeology, Durham University, Durham, United Kingdom.
Instituto Internacional de Investigaciones Prehistóricas de Cantabria, Universidad de Cantabria, Santander, Spain.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2019 May;169(1):31-54. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.23805. Epub 2019 Feb 25.
We analyze the processing sequence involved in the manufacture of a skull-cup and the manipulation of human bones from the Early Neolithic of Cueva de El Toro (Málaga, Spain).
The Early Neolithic material studied includes human remains found in two separate assemblages. Assemblage A consists of one skull-cup, a non-manipulated adult human mandible, and four ceramic vessels. Assemblage B contains manipulated and non-manipulated human remains that appeared mingled with domestic waste. Using a taphonomic approach, we evaluate the skull-cup processing and the anthropogenic alteration of human bones.
The skull-cup was processed by careful paring away of skin, fragmentation of the facial skeleton and base of the skull, and controlled percussion of the edges of the calotte to achieve a regular shape. It was later boiled for some time in a container that caused pot polish in a specific area. The other human bones appeared scattered throughout the living area, mixed with other remains of domestic activity. Some of these bones show cut marks, percussion damage for marrow extraction, and tooth/chewing marks.
Evidence from Cueva de El Toro suggests that cannibalism was conducted in the domestic sphere, likely following ritualized practices where the skull-cup could have played a part. Interpretation of this evidence suggests two hypotheses: (a) aggressive cannibalism relates to extreme inter-group violence; and (b) funerary cannibalism is a facet of multi-stage burial practices. Similar evidence has been found in other Neolithic sites of this region and suggests that cannibalism and skull-cups were elements widespread in these communities. These practices may be linked to significant transformations associated with the end of the Early Neolithic in southern Iberia.
我们分析了制造头骨杯和操作人类骨骼所涉及的加工顺序,这些骨骼来自西班牙马拉加的 El Toro 洞穴的新石器时代早期。
我们研究的新石器时代早期材料包括在两个不同的组合中发现的人类遗骸。组合 A 由一个头骨杯、一个未经过处理的成年人下颌骨和四个陶瓷容器组成。组合 B 包含经过和未经过处理的人类遗骸,这些遗骸似乎与生活垃圾混合在一起。我们采用埋藏学方法评估头骨杯的加工和人类骨骼的人为改变。
头骨杯是通过仔细地削去皮肤、破碎面部骨骼和颅底,以及对头盖骨边缘进行控制敲击来加工成规则形状的。然后,它在一个容器中煮了一段时间,在特定区域产生了锅光。其他人类骨骼散布在生活区域内,与其他家庭活动的遗骸混合在一起。其中一些骨头有切割痕迹、为提取骨髓而进行的敲击损伤以及牙齿/咀嚼痕迹。
El Toro 洞穴的证据表明,食人行为是在家庭领域进行的,可能是在仪式化的实践中进行的,头骨杯可能在其中发挥了作用。对这些证据的解释提出了两种假设:(a)攻击性食人行为与极端的群体间暴力有关;(b)丧葬食人行为是多阶段埋葬实践的一个方面。该地区其他新石器时代遗址也发现了类似的证据,表明食人行为和头骨杯是这些社区普遍存在的元素。这些实践可能与伊比利亚南部新石器时代末期相关的重大变革有关。