Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
Australian Research Centre for Human Evolution, Griffith University, Nathan, Queensland, Australia.
Nature. 2022 Sep;609(7927):547-551. doi: 10.1038/s41586-022-05160-8. Epub 2022 Sep 7.
The prevailing view regarding the evolution of medicine is that the emergence of settled agricultural societies around 10,000 years ago (the Neolithic Revolution) gave rise to a host of health problems that had previously been unknown among non-sedentary foraging populations, stimulating the first major innovations in prehistoric medical practices. Such changes included the development of more advanced surgical procedures, with the oldest known indication of an 'operation' formerly thought to have consisted of the skeletal remains of a European Neolithic farmer (found in Buthiers-Boulancourt, France) whose left forearm had been surgically removed and then partially healed. Dating to around 7,000 years ago, this accepted case of amputation would have required comprehensive knowledge of human anatomy and considerable technical skill, and has thus been viewed as the earliest evidence of a complex medical act. Here, however, we report the discovery of skeletal remains of a young individual from Borneo who had the distal third of their left lower leg surgically amputated, probably as a child, at least 31,000 years ago. The individual survived the procedure and lived for another 6-9 years, before their remains were intentionally buried in Liang Tebo cave, which is located in East Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo, in a limestone karst area that contains some of the world's earliest dated rock art. This unexpectedly early evidence of a successful limb amputation suggests that at least some modern human foraging groups in tropical Asia had developed sophisticated medical knowledge and skills long before the Neolithic farming transition.
关于医学的演变,目前占主导地位的观点认为,大约一万年前(新石器时代革命)定居农业社会的出现引发了一系列以前在非定居狩猎人群中未知的健康问题,刺激了史前医学实践的首次重大创新。这些变化包括更先进的手术程序的发展,最古老的已知“手术”迹象以前被认为是一个欧洲新石器时代农民(在法国的布蒂埃斯-布尔朗库尔发现)的骨骼遗骸,他的左前臂已被手术切除,然后部分愈合。这个被接受的截肢案例可以追溯到大约 7000 年前,需要对人体解剖学有全面的了解和相当的技术技能,因此被认为是复杂医疗行为的最早证据。然而,在这里,我们报告了在婆罗洲发现的一名年轻个体的骨骼遗骸,他们的左小腿远端被手术截肢,可能是在儿童时期,至少在 31000 年前。该个体在手术后幸存下来,并又活了 6-9 年,然后他们的遗骸被故意埋葬在东加里曼丹印度尼西亚婆罗洲的梁特博洞穴中,该洞穴位于石灰质喀斯特地区,那里有一些世界上最早的有日期的岩石艺术。这一令人意外的早期成功的肢体截肢的证据表明,至少一些热带亚洲的现代人类狩猎群体在新石器时代农业过渡之前很久就已经发展出了复杂的医学知识和技能。