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9,500-year-old cremation of a mystery woman in Malawi baffles archaeologists

9,500-year-old cremation of a mystery woman in Malawi baffles archaeologists
Archaeologists working in Malawi say they have uncovered the world’s earliest known intentional cremation of an adult human, a discovery that is forcing scientists to rethink what early funeral rituals looked like.The cremation was found at the Hora 1 archaeological site, tucked at the base of a granite hill that rises several hundred feet above the surrounding landscape. The site has been known to researchers for decades, but this particular discovery had remained hidden in plain sight.At the site, researchers uncovered a prehistoric ash deposit roughly the size of a queen bed. Inside were fragmented remains of a woman described as “just under five feet tall,” preserved for thousands of years.“With finding this particular funeral pyre, I think we just got lucky because it’s in a shelter and the rain doesn’t fall directly on it and there’s good preservation of bones,” archaeologist Jessica Thompson of Yale University told The Independent.She explained that the ash itself had hardened over time. “It wasn’t rain, but the soil moisture hardened the ash and made it hard to excavate, but it was also helpful since termites tend to burrow through bones, but at this site the cemented layer prevented that,” Dr Thompson said.
Pointing to marks left behind, she added, “You can see here that the mites try to go in, and then they’re like ‘no!’ and they don’t go through the cemented layer,” calling it a “very interesting, fortunate set of preservation”.

Older than any confirmed cremation on record

Until now, the oldest confirmed deliberate cremations, identified by the presence of a funeral pyre — dated back about 3,300 years.By contrast, researchers say the cremation at Hora 1 was a carefully planned event carried out around 9,500 years ago by African hunter-gatherers.“This is a very unusual funeral treatment. From this time period, we don’t find a lot of burned bodies so it’s pretty shocking,” anthropologist Jessica Cerezo-Román of the University of Oklahoma told The Independent.“Also why this person? Was she significant in life or in death? We don’t know that yet,” she added.

What funerals reveal about ancient societies

Scientists say studying prehistoric burial practices can offer rare insight into how people treated one another in life.“Who the person is and how they were treated when they lived influences how they are treated in their funerals,” Dr Cerezo-Román said.At Hora 1, the woman’s remains show signs of careful handling. Researchers believe her body was cremated shortly after death, before decomposition had set in, suggesting deliberate and coordinated action.“These practices emphasise complex mortuary and ritual activities with origins predating the advent of food production, and challenge traditional assumptions about community-scale cooperation and memory-making in tropical hunter-gatherer societies,” the researchers wrote in their study, published in Science Advances.Addressing the physical evidence, Dr Cerezo-Román added, “These hands-on manipulations, cutting flesh from the bones and removing the skull, sound very gruesome, but there are many reasons people may have done this associated with remembrance, social memory, and ancestral veneration.”

Why cremation was so rare among hunter-gatherers

Although burned human remains have been found at sites as old as 40,000 years, including Lake Mungo in Australia, intentionally built funeral pyres only appear much later in the archaeological record.Cremation became more common among food-producing societies, which had more advanced tools and organized labor. Among hunter-gatherers, it has been extremely rare.Pyres demand enormous effort. According to the study, building the Hora 1 pyre would have required gathering at least 30 kilograms of deadwood and grass and likely reached temperatures above 500°C, a major communal undertaking.The discovery is prompting archaeologists to rethink how early hunter-gatherer groups organized labor and ritual life.Researchers also found evidence that people returned to the site after the cremation and built additional large fires, suggesting the event became part of a longer tradition tied to collective memory.“Why was this one woman cremated when the other burials at the site were not treated that way?” Dr Thompson asked.“There must have been something specific about her that warranted special treatment,” she said.
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