Sima de los Huesos; the earliest funerary behaviour?
For one of my other classes I was looking into an interesting site in Spain that got me thinking. The site is Sima De Los Huesos and it is a cave site associated with H. heidelbergensis. Sima consistsof 28 individuals all under the age of 30, with one young child, adolescents, and young adults which compromises 80% of the Middle Pleistocene specimens ever found including a complete range of skeletal parts from the harder more durable bones to rare, soft bones like the hyoid and inner ear bones. In addition to the hominid remains, which are all located in a continuous depositional context; there are remains of multiple carnivores including foxes, wolves and a very large number of bear specimens. The fact that there are only carnivore faunal remains at this site rather then herbivores and an absences of any materials indicating an occupation site leads some to believe that Sima could represent the earliest evidence of mortuary practices in the world. The age profile of the deceased as well does not indicate a natural occurrence but rather a cultural one.The site is dated to 400 kya which is abotu 300 ky before any other conclusive evidence of intentional burial.
Another fact which makes this site extremely intriguing is the presence of a single quartzite handaxe associated with the bodies. The handaxe is the poster child of the Acheulean tradition and there exact purpose and use is still debated among many researchers. The one in Sima is a fairly nice representation; it is finely flaked and made of a material not common in handaxe manufacture from the time or area. This tool may have been accidentally introduced into the deposit but may have been symbolically introduced possibly being the first ever representation of grave goods.
Sima De Los Huesos handaxe
(Image from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo_heidelbergensis)
Carbonell, E., & Mosquera, M. (2006). The emergence of a symbolic behaviour: the sepulchral pit of Sima de los Huesos, Sierra de Atapuerca, Burgos, Spain. Comptes Rendus Palevol, 5(1/2), 155-160.
This is one of my favourite archaeological sites, for exactly the reasons that you have highlighted. Well... that and the idea that there's this massive cave system that has fascinated humans for time beyond imagining!
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