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Prehistoric skull with puncture wounds could be world’s first murder mystery

Pieced together from 52 fragments found in cave in northern Spain, 430,000-year-old skull seems to show victim was bludgeoned to death

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The skull suggests that violence and murder long predate the emergence of modern humans. Photo: Reuters

Scientists have pieced together the world’s earliest murder mystery, showing that an ancient human appears to have met their end after being bludgeoned to death and thrown down a cave shaft.

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The skull, which has two holes above the left eye, belonged to an early human closely related to Neanderthals who lived around 430,000 years ago. The discovery suggests that violence and murder long predate the emergence of modern humans, around 200,000 years ago.

The skull was pieced together from 52 fragments found in an underground cave at the Sima de los Huesos archaeological site in northern Spain. The almost complete skull shows clear evidence of two serious impacts. The scientists found no evidence that any healing had taken place around the holes, indicating that the blows were either fatal or occurred after death.

Nohemi Sala, a palaeontologist who led the analysis at the Institute of Health Carlos III in Madrid, said: “We believe that violence caused the death of this individual. It would be very unlikely to break the cranium twice in nearly the same place, accidentally.”

Assuming that the murder thesis is correct, the latest analysis could shed light on the significance of other finds at the Sima de los Huesos. In 2013, scientists reported on the discovery of more than 28 early human skeletons , all excavated from the same cave. Since the site is only accessible via a 13m vertical shaft - and there is no evidence that it was used as a dwelling place - questions have arisen about how the skeletons ended up there in the first place.

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