6533b857fe1ef96bd12b3acb

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Funerary practices or food delicatessen? Human remains with anthropic marks from the Western Mediterranean Mesolithic

Jesús Francisco Jordá PardoManuel Pérez RipollMª Paz De Miguel IbáñezCarlos Verdasco CebriánDomingo C. Salazar-garcíaDomingo C. Salazar-garcíaDomingo C. Salazar-garcíaJuan V. Morales-pérezCarles Miret I EstruchJ. Emili Aura Tortosa

subject

Mediterranean climate010506 paleontologyArcheologyHistory060101 anthropologyTaphonomyContext (archaeology)Subsistence agricultureHuman Factors and Ergonomics06 humanities and the arts01 natural sciencesArchaeologyPrehistòriaGeographyBone Cortex0601 history and archaeologyAnthropic principleMesolithic0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

Abstract The identification of unarticulated human remains with anthropic marks in archaeological contexts normally involves solving two issues: a general one associated with the analysis and description of the anthropic manipulation marks, and another with regard to the interpretation of their purpose. In this paper we present new evidence of anthropophagic behaviour amongst hunter-gatherer groups of the Mediterranean Mesolithic. A total of 30 human remains with anthropic manipulation marks have been found in the Mesolithic layers of Coves de Santa Maira (Castell de Castells, Alicante, Spain), dating from ca. 10.2–9 cal ky BP. We describe the different marks identified on both human and faunal remains at the site (lithic, tooth, percussion and fire marks on bone cortex). As well as describing these marks, and considering that both human and faunal remains at the site present similar depositional and taphonomic features, this paper also contextualizes them within the archaeological context and subsistence patterns described for Mesolithic groups in the region. We cannot entirely rule out the possibility that these practices may be the result of periodic food stress suffered by the human populations. These anthropophagic events at the site coincide with a cultural change at the regional Epipalaeolithic-Mesolithic transition.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2016.11.002