September 5, 2012
Early Cannibalism Tied to Territorial Defense?
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An artist’s reconstruction of Homo antecessor, a hominid species that butchered and ate its own kind. A new study suggests the cannibalism was a form of territorial defense. Image: jlmaral/Flickr
The earliest known instance of cannibalism among hominids occurred roughly 800,000 years ago. The victims, mainly children, may have been eaten as part of a strategy to defend territories against neighbors, researchers report online in the Journal of Human Evolution. The new study shows how anthropologists use the behavior of modern humans and primates to make inferences about what hominids did in the past—and demonstrates the limitations of such comparisons.
The cannibalism in question was discovered in the Gran Dolina cave site of Spain’s Atapuerca Mountains. Eudald Carbonell of the University of Rovira and Virgili in Spain and colleagues found evidence of butchering on bones belonging to Homo antecessor, a controversial species that lived in Europe as early as 1.2 million years ago. Because no other hominid species has been found in the region at the same time as the butchered bones, the victims must have been eaten by their own kind, the team concluded in 2010 in the journal Current Anthropology (PDF).
Today, human cannibalism occurs in a variety of contexts: for nutritional value (often in times of starvation), as part of funerary rituals or during warfare. The different purposes of cannibalism can leave different patterns in the archaeological record. When humans consume other humans for purely dietary reasons, the victims are often treated just like any other prey. This is what the researchers found at Gran Dolina. Eleven individuals were butchered in a manner similar to that of deer and other mammals: Bones had cut marks in areas of muscle attachments and the skulls had signs of defleshing. Thus, H. antecessor appeared to eat its own kind for a nutritional purpose—but probably not because of a food shortage, as the team says there’s evidence of cannibalism over an extended period of time, dozens or even hundreds of years.
So why cannibalism? To find an answer, the researchers looked to chimpanzees. That’s because some aspects of H. antecessor cannibalism don’t resemble those of contemporary human cannibalism or cannibalism seen in Neanderthals or early modern humans living 100,000 years ago. For instance, nine of the 11 butchered individuals at Gran Dolina were children or adolescents compared with the largely adult victims of more recent human cannibalism.
Young victims is a pattern seen among chimpanzees. When female chimps range alone near the boundary of their territory, males from the neighboring group may kill and eat the females’ infants. Carbonell and his colleagues suggest the best explanation for this behavior is territorial defense and expansion. Males may attack to scare off other chimps as a way to protect their resources and gain new land to roam; such attacks are easiest against vulnerable females and their young, which make good meals. The team likewise concludes a similar explanation may have been the motivation behind H. antecessor cannibalism.
Whether this is a reasonable conclusion depends on some unanswered questions. For example, the researchers assume that the cannibalism was the result of intergroup violence and aggression, but they offer no evidence that the H. antecessor cannibals came from a different group than the victims. If they were all members of the same clan, then territorial defense doesn’t seem likely. It also seems unlikely if H. antecessor‘s social structure was vastly different from chimps—in which groups of probably related males band together to actively defend a territory while females in a community often forage alone with their infants.
It looks like the team has some more work to do.
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It is possible that the young were eaten because they had died of natural causes. Infant mortality is not something new. Lots of places in today’s world children die from various causes including disease, starvation etc.
The appropriate caption had been “An artist’s reconstruction of a male Homo antecessor”. Compare the pair “scientists – female scientists” “authors – female authors”. The symmetric pair is “male scientists – female scientists”, or else the language takes males as the basic human unit and females as some kind of addition.
It is also possible that it was simply a matter of “Waste not, want not.” Why waste a perfectly good child when it can be so easily consumed in a meal? Why waste labor digging a burial hole when eating the child is more labor preventive?
The existence of cannibalism over centuries doesn’t have to mean that the reason wouldn’t have suffered from a lack of food; the local population of Homo erectus – of which the antecessor is basically just an European variant – might have lived in a marginal environment, suffering repeatedly from food shortage and might have developed it’s own way of dealing with this: cannibalism.
The sex of the dead used for food would be interesting. If the majority of the dead would have been girls, this might have been an internal way of dealing with an “extra” population. The victims of infant and child murder committed for population control and family strategies tending to be more likely girls than boys.
If male, they might signify a change in dominant male kingroups in the local Homo erectus population, the eating of the sons of the defeated high ranking males being symbolic act.
From ancient Greece to the Aztec, eating the flesh of the kin of the vanquished (and forcing them to eat it) was a highly symbolic act that “fleshed out” the relationship between victor and loser. It sealed it.
It’s possible that higher-ranking adults may have routinely eaten the children of lower-ranking adults, simply because they could. Once the taste for young flesh was established, and social dominance prevented opposition, a tradition would have been born. The tradition may have also served to limit population growth to stay within the bounds of local resources.
I agree w/eyebeam. Perhaps they did it because they were hungry and they simply could prey on the weak. Hominids were (I would assume), not in the least spiritually or ethically evolved yet, so what would it matter to kill the young? Not like now when we are so much higher evolved why we’d never think of killing the young and innocent……..or would we?
Hi, Erin,
I really like your last sentence! And it’s well to be cautious. That’s because it’s still an open question whether or not the remains of H. antecessor were deposited, along with the rest of the animals, in the natural traps–vertical shafts–that feature in each of the localities in the Atapuerca Mountains. If so, eating the young might be less like cannibalism and more like an existential imperative. And until and unless these creatures are demonstrated, unequivocally, to possess the same cognitive abilities as you and I, we should also be wary of attaching too much emotional and symbolic weight to the actions of H. antecessor, which we choose to view as ‘cannibalism,’ and therefore ‘icky!’ Keep up the hunt. Rob