French archaeologists in northern Sudan have unearthed a 5,500 year-old Stone Age tomb they believe to confirm the location of Africa's "oldest human sacrifice."
In a graveyard in Al-Kadada, north of Khartoum, the archaeologists have dug up the tomb of a man and a woman facing each other in a ditch, with bodies of two women, two goats and a dog buried nearby.
The discovery of the group "confirms" excavations last year which found traces of the oldest human sacrifice ever identified in Africa, Jacques Reinold, a researcher for the French section of the Sudanese antiquities department, said.
The ancient unearthed bones date from between 3,700 and 3,400 BC, a period considered as one the key stages in the transition from a hunting to a farming society.
The Al-Kadada region, on fertile land alongside the Nile, is regarded as one of the cradles of humanity in the Neolithic era.
Mr Reinold's team also unearthed polished axes, a millstone, make-up palettes and ceramics at Al-Kadada.
Thursday, February 05, 2009
Africa's oldest human sacrifice found in Sudan
The Telegraph, UK
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2 comments:
It is not clear from this what the evidence is for the 'oldest human sacrifice'.
I agree. I've been hunting around for more information but haven't found anything yet. Very frustrating!
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