Early Humans Carved Each Other Up for Dinnertime

The reappraisal of a 1.45 million-year-old leg bone pushes back the timeline for early humans that may have butchered each other.

Written byMatt Hrodey
| 2 min read
Google NewsGoogle News Preferred Source
Pobiner and her colleagues say these marks were created when an early human cut off the leg muscle of another hominin.Credit: Jennifer Clark

Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter for the latest science news

Sign Up

In 2017, Briana Pobiner, a paleoanthropologist at the Smithsonian National Museum, pointed a magnifying lens at a 1.45 million-year-old tibia and saw a series of neat slashes. The bone belonged to the National Museums of Kenya in Nairobi, where Pobiner had gone to look for animal tooth marks on ancient hominin bones. While researchers generally assume that animals killed and ate our ancient ancestors, relatively little evidence has ever come to light.

But this was a different kind of evidence, as the nine slashes resembled butchery marks, meaning another human had inflicted them with a stone tool.

“These cut marks look very similar to what I’ve seen on animal fossils that were being processed for consumption,” Pobiner says in a press release. “It seems most likely that the meat from this leg was eaten and that it was eaten for nutrition as opposed to for a ritual.”

Cannibalism in Question

If Pobiner is right about the tibia, its marks present the oldest conclusive evidence to date of a hominin butchering another hominin. Whether this constituted cannibalism is unknown as that requires two parties (an eater and an eaten) of the same species, while neither in this case are known for sure. After Mary Leakey discovered the bone in 1970, Richard Leakey classified it as an Australopithecus boisei. But later sources proposed Homo erectus and other species.


Read More: Who Were the Neanderthals?


Pobiner was less interested in resolving this decades-long dispute than in confirming that the slashes came from a stone tool. Doing so meant making use of a special database of bone marks and injuries, so she made impressions of the slashes along with two others that likely came from animal teeth. She sent the molds to Michael Pante, a paleoanthropologist at Colorado State University, along with no information as to their origins or her suspicions.

Pante scanned in the molds and compared them against a database of about 900 other examples of bones injured by tools, trampling and carnivores. The database confirmed Pobiner’s early conclusions and further proposed that a large cat, maybe even a saber tooth tiger, had made the two teeth marks. Whether the animal left the two marks before or after the hominin died, the researchers couldn’t say.

The 3D model of marks 7 and 8. (Credit: Michael Pante)

Michael Pante

Reasons for Eating the Hominin

Examination of the slashes yielded yet more evidence, from their V-shape reminiscent of a cutting tool to their unremarkable coloring. Since that matched the rest of the bone, the paper says, the marks likely occurred before fossilization.

Scientists have documented cannibalism in more than 1,300 species, including several primates, the paper says, for reasons that were nutritional, aggressive, affectionate, psychotic, ritualistic, funerary, spiritual, magical or for purposes of war. Counted among those species are Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens, who practiced cannibalism at early sites.

In this case, the wielder of the stone tool appeared to have removed a leg muscle next to the calf, for purposes of eating.

“You can make some pretty amazing discoveries by going back into museum collections and taking a second look at fossils,” Pobiner says in a press release. “It takes a community of scientists coming in with different questions and techniques to keep expanding our knowledge of the world.”


Read More: These Prehistoric Paintings Are 57,000 Years Old — But Who Painted Them?


Meet the Author

  • MH
    Matt is a staff writer for DiscoverMagazine.com, where he follows new advances in the study of human consciousness and important questions in space science - including whether our universe exists inside a black hole. Matt's prior work has appeared in PCGamesN, EscapistMagazine.com, and Milwaukee Magazine, where he was an editor six years.View Full Profile

Related Topics

Stay Curious

JoinOur List

Sign up for our weekly science updates

View our Privacy Policy

SubscribeTo The Magazine

Save up to 40% off the cover price when you subscribe to Discover magazine.

Subscribe