-
39 votes
-
Many prehistoric handprints show a finger missing. Canadian scientists say evidence shows digits may have been ritually removed to appease deities or aid social cohesion.
26 votes -
Americas’ first cowboys were enslaved Africans, ancient cow DNA suggests
24 votes -
Archaeologists reveal largest palaeolithic cave art site in Eastern Iberia
16 votes -
Recent analysis shows Iberian Copper Age tomb of high-status person in Spain was built for a woman
“This study was undertaken as part of a broader research looking at the interplay between early social complexity and gender inequalities,” study co-author and University of Seville prehistorian...
“This study was undertaken as part of a broader research looking at the interplay between early social complexity and gender inequalities,” study co-author and University of Seville prehistorian Leonardo García Sanjuán tells PopSci. “As part of this research, it became obvious that there is a serious problem in the identification of biological sex in prehistoric skeletons, which are often found in a poor state of preservation.”
Now redubbed the “Ivory Lady,” this woman’s tomb was first discovered in 2008 in Valencia on Spain’s southeastern coast. The find dates back to the Copper Age, when the metal was used for construction, agriculture, and even creating engravings of owls that may have been toys. The grave is also a rare example of single occupancy burial at the time and the tomb was filled with the largest collection of valuable and rare items in the region. These treasures include high-quality flint, ostrich eggshell amber, a rock crystal dagger, and ivory tusks.
All of these trinkets and single tomb initially indicated that the remains must belong to a prominent male, but peptides and DNA don’t lie.
10 votes -
The spy whose tapes rocked Spanish society
5 votes -
The biggest mapping mistake of all time
7 votes -
The transatlantic element: Psychoanalysis, exile, circulation of ideas and institutionalization between Spain and Argentina
5 votes -
What each nation wanted from the scramble for Africa vs what they got from it
3 votes -
José Epita Mbomo: The Spanish electrician who sabotaged the Nazis
7 votes -
The Mexican American border: A tale of two colonies (Part 1/2)
3 votes -
How WW2 made Spain do everything later
4 votes -
The history of Spain’s ‘Insured for Fire’ building signs
7 votes