For example, a review of prehistoric European sites identified cannibalism in fewer than 10 percent of known assemblages, often associated with specific ritual or survival events rather than daily ...
Instead, cannibalism may have been a way to dehumanise ... pots and weapons were brought over from continental Europe. Skulls uncovered from this period are vastly different from Stone Age skulls ...
The US sanctions-driven surge in crude tanker rates is being aided by the return of a rare tactic by traders and owners first ...
Bronze Age Britons were cannibals who ate their enemies ... researchers from several European institutions analysed the bones. Their findings, published in the journal Antiquity, showed numerous ...
These far more functional explanations for why humans would eat other humans are a far cry from the violence and inhumanity suggested by Columbus and his classical Western European idea of cannibalism ...
The final leg brought the ship back to Europe. The African slave boarding ... More than a few thought that the Europeans were cannibals. Olaudah Equiano, an African captured as a boy who later ...
Bronze Age Britons were cannibals who ate their enemies ... researchers from several European institutions analysed the bones. Their findings, published in the journal Antiquity, showed numerous ...