Incisions on the frontal of the Krapina 3 cranium differ from other cut marks from the site. Thirty-five, mostly parallel marks course up the frontal from right of the midline, just posterior to the supraorbitale point to left of the midline, slightly anterior to bregma. They are angled mostly perpendicular to the midsagittal plane, averaging 5.2 mm in length and are on average 1.2 mm apart. The marks' characteristics are not consistent with scalping, cannibalism, defleshing or other perimortem activities described for Neandertals or modern groups. These marks represent a type of funereal behavior yet to be documented in Neandertals and suggest a kind of ritual treatment of the deceased
Cut-marked and broken human bones are a recurrent feature of Magdalenian (~17–12,000 years BP, uncal...
Cut-marked and broken human bones are a recurrent feature of Magdalenian (~17-12,000 years BP, uncal...
Dental fractures can be produced during life or post-mortem. Ante-mortem chipping may be indicative ...
Incisions on the frontal of the Krapina 3 cranium differ from other cut marks from the site. Thirty...
Incisions on the frontal of the Krapina 3 cranium differ from other cut marks from the site. Thirty-...
In 1889 remains of fossile man were discovered in a cave in the locality »Husnjakovo brdo« in Krapin...
The Krapina facial remains are associated with the Neandertals based on a number of descriptive morp...
All instances of trauma reported or personally observed in any known Neandertal skeletal remain were...
Objectives Humanly induced modifications on human and non‐human bones from four archaeological sites...
The Krapina fossils are the largest collection of Neandertals known, representing a unique opportuni...
Margaux Cave (Belgium) yielded a Pre‐Boreal Early Mesolithic burial covered by what resembled a buri...
The early Neandertal sample from Krapina preserves twenty partial scapulae, from immature and mature...
Evidence and traces recorded on fossil bones, directly or indirectly produced by hominins, can shed ...
This paper discusses the results of the analysis carried out on a female skull coming from a collect...
Almost 150 years after the first identification of Neandertal skeletal material, the cognitive and s...
Cut-marked and broken human bones are a recurrent feature of Magdalenian (~17–12,000 years BP, uncal...
Cut-marked and broken human bones are a recurrent feature of Magdalenian (~17-12,000 years BP, uncal...
Dental fractures can be produced during life or post-mortem. Ante-mortem chipping may be indicative ...
Incisions on the frontal of the Krapina 3 cranium differ from other cut marks from the site. Thirty...
Incisions on the frontal of the Krapina 3 cranium differ from other cut marks from the site. Thirty-...
In 1889 remains of fossile man were discovered in a cave in the locality »Husnjakovo brdo« in Krapin...
The Krapina facial remains are associated with the Neandertals based on a number of descriptive morp...
All instances of trauma reported or personally observed in any known Neandertal skeletal remain were...
Objectives Humanly induced modifications on human and non‐human bones from four archaeological sites...
The Krapina fossils are the largest collection of Neandertals known, representing a unique opportuni...
Margaux Cave (Belgium) yielded a Pre‐Boreal Early Mesolithic burial covered by what resembled a buri...
The early Neandertal sample from Krapina preserves twenty partial scapulae, from immature and mature...
Evidence and traces recorded on fossil bones, directly or indirectly produced by hominins, can shed ...
This paper discusses the results of the analysis carried out on a female skull coming from a collect...
Almost 150 years after the first identification of Neandertal skeletal material, the cognitive and s...
Cut-marked and broken human bones are a recurrent feature of Magdalenian (~17–12,000 years BP, uncal...
Cut-marked and broken human bones are a recurrent feature of Magdalenian (~17-12,000 years BP, uncal...
Dental fractures can be produced during life or post-mortem. Ante-mortem chipping may be indicative ...