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Saturday, July 01, 2006

Early signs of elephant butchers

From The BBC.

Thursday, 29 June 2006

Bones and tusks dating back 400,000 years are the earliest signs in Britain of ancient humans butchering elephants for meat, say archaeologists. Remains of a single adult elephant surrounded by stone tools were found in northwest Kent during work on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link. Scientists believe hunters used the tools to cut off the meat, after killing the animal with wooden spears. The find is described in the Journal of Quaternary Science. The first signs of the Stone Age site were uncovered by constructors at Southfleet Road in Ebbsfleet, Kent.

Excavations revealed the skeleton of an extinct species of elephant (Palaeoloxodon antiquus) lying at the edge of what would once have been a small lake. Flint tools lay scattered around, suggesting the animal had been cut up by a tribe of the early humans around at the time, known as Homo heidelbergensis. "It is the earliest site of elephant butchery in Britain," Dr Francis Wenban-Smith of the University of Southampton told the BBC News website. "In fact it is the only such site in Britain and it is very rare to find undisturbed evidence of this kind."

Dr Wenban-Smith believes the elephant, which was twice the size of those living today, was probably brought down by a pack of hunters armed with wooden spears. "They either hunted it or possibly found it in an injured state and then killed it," he explained. "Then they got some flint tools from nearby and they would have swarmed all over it and cut off the meat. They would have been carrying off armfuls of meat to their local base camp."

The elephant would have been eaten raw, as there is no evidence that fire was used for cooking at the time. The hunter gatherers probably also feasted on other large mammals, as the bones of buffalo, rhino, deer and horse were also found nearby. "There does seem to be increasing evidence that they were focusing on hunting only the larger animals with more meat and suggestions that they were living in larger groups than we've generally thought," said Dr Wenban-Smith. The remains of the elephant - including parts of its upper torso, skull, fore-limbs, tusks and some teeth - have been taken to the Natural History Museum for further analysis. The site itself has been covered over and now lies beneath a roundabout near the Channel Tunnel Rail Link car park.

1 comment:

CyberKitten said...

The Bog Bodies where probably sacrifices to appease whatever God they worshiped at the time. They could have been criminals or captured enemies - though it is thought that it might have been considered an honour to die in such a way. They also sacrificed valuable objects such as swords and such to keep 'on side' with the local god. The more valuable the item the better chance of appeasement - sort of a 'no gain without pain' kind of thing.