Earliest evidence for intentional cremation of human remains in Africa
University of Oklahoma · University of Alberta · +15 more institutions
Abstract
Human cremation on an open pyre demands intensive labor, communal resources, and sensory exposures. We report the earliest evidence for intentional cremation in Africa, the oldest in situ adult pyre in the world, and one of only a few associated with hunter-gatherers. A large cremation feature at Hora 1 in Malawi dates to ~9500 years ago and contains the remains of a small, gracile adult with evidence for perimortem defleshing and postcremation manipulation. Subsequent revisiting of the site to build fires in the same place provided additional pyrotechnological spectacles. High-resolution, multiproxy reconstruction of the ritual associated with cremation and its subsequent deposition demonstrates complex…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 166.62
- Percentile
- 99%
- References
- 99
Authors
15- JIJessica I. Cerezo-RománCorresponding
University of Oklahoma
- ESElizabeth SawchukCorresponding
University of Alberta, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Stony Brook University
- FSFlora Schilt
University of Algarve, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
- ABAlex Bertacchi
Planetary Science Institute, Yale University
- GBGina BuckleyCorresponding
University of Algarve
Topics & keywords
- Natural (archaeology)
- Foraging
- Archaeological evidence
- Feature (linguistics)
- Paleopathology
- Decent work and economic growth