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Australian researchers help date ancient child's burial to 78,000 years


Australian researchers help date ancient child’s burial to 78,000 years
By
Melissa Coade
Thursday May 6, 2021
Maasai sitting by the ocean on the beach. (Image: Adobe/shangarey)
The earliest known deliberate burial of humans living in Africa has been found in a cave in Kenya, with the discovery of bone fragments of a small child.
The body of a small 2.5-3-year old child, known by researchers as ‘Mtoto’ (‘child’ in Swahili), was buried in the cave near the coast of Kenya, on its side and with legs drawn up to its chest. 
The finding at Panga ya Saidi, reported in ....

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A cave site in Kenya's forests reveals the oldest human burial in Africa


By Alison Crowther, Senior Lecture in Archaeology, The University of Queensland
Mohammad Javad Shoaee
Africa is often referred to as the cradle of humankind – the birthplace of our species,
Homo sapiens. There is evidence of the development of early symbolic behaviours such as pigment use and perforated shell ornaments in Africa, but so far most of what we know about the development of complex social behaviours such as burial and mourning has come from Eurasia.
However, the remains of a child buried almost 80,000 years ago under an overhang at Panga ya Saidi cave in Kenya is providing important new details. ....

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Africa's Oldest Human Burial Site Has Been Uncovered


© Mohammad Javad Shoaee / Jorge González / Elena Santos / F. Fuego / MaxPlanck Institute / CENIEH.
The discovery of the earliest human burial site yet found in Africa, by an international team including several CNRS researchers, has just been announced in the journal
Nature. At Panga ya Saidi, in Kenya, north of Mombasa, the body of a three-year-old, dubbed Mtoto (Swahili for child ) by the researchers, was deposited and buried in an excavated pit approximately 78,000 years ago.
Through analysis of sediments and the arrangement of the bones, the research team showed that the body had been protected by being wrapped in a shroud made of perishable material, and that the head had likely rested on an object that was also made up of perishable material. Though there are no signs of offerings or ochre, both common at more recent burial sites, the funerary treatment given Mtoto suggests a complex ritual that likely required the active participation of many members of the ....

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Scientists uncover Africa's oldest human burial, a 78,000-year-old child


Scientists find Africa s oldest human burial, a child from 78,000 years ago
CNET
2 hrs ago
Leslie Katz
© Provided by CNET
The trench excavation at the mouth of a Panga ya Saidi cave shows where archaeologists unearthed the ancient child s grave. Mohammad Javad Shoaee
A cluster of 78,000-year-old bones found at the mouth of a coastal Kenyan cave represent the earliest known formal human burial in Africa, shedding light on how our ancient ancestors interacted with the dead. 
The remains belong to a Middle Stone Age child believed to have been between 2.5 and 3 years old. The bones of the toddler, whom scientists nicknamed Mtoto ( child in Swahili), come from the Panga ya Saidi cave complex in southeast Kenya. The excavation site has yielded a rich trove of historical artifacts, including beads made from seashells and thousands of tools that reflect technological shifts from the Middle Stone Age to the Later Stone Age.   ....

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Scientists Discover the Earliest Known Human Burial in Africa


A coastal cave in Kenya sheltered the body of a tiny child no longer than three, who was arrayed as if still sleeping, in a purposely dug grave for roughly 78,000 years. Unearthed by archeologists, it is the oldest human burial discovered in Africa to date.
Archeological clues tell that the child was loved by those who buried it: Its body was wrapped in a perishable cloth before it was placed in a grave with legs drawn up to the chest, according to a press release. The toddler s head was resting on what was probably a makeshift pillow.
An artist’s interpretation of Mtoto’s burial. Source: Fernando Fueyo ....

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