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The Neanderthal and Aterian and Mousterian in North Africa
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by the lioness,: [QB] https://blog.britishmuseum.org/violence-and-climate-change-in-prehistoric-egypt-and-sudan/ of the 61 men, women and children buried at Jebel Sahaba, at least 45% of them died of inflicted wounds Clearly, the conflict was brutal and seems to have been fairly constant, as healed injuries have also been observed. _____________________ wikipedia Cranial analysis of the Jebel Sahaba fossils found that they shared osteological affinities with a hominid series from Wadi Halfa in Sudan.[6] Additionally, comparison of the limb proportions of the Jebel Sahaba skeletal remains with those of various ancient and recent series indicated that they were most similar in body shape to the examined modern populations from Sub-Saharan Africa (viz. 19th century fossils belonging to the San population, 19th century West Africa fossils, 19th and 20th century Pygmy fossils, and mid-20th century fossils culled from Kenya and Uganda in East Africa). However, the Jebel Sahaba specimens were post-cranially distinct from the Iberomaurusians and other coeval series from North Africa, and they were also morphologically remote from later Nubia skeletal series and from fossils belonging to the Mesolithic Natufian culture of the Levant.[7] [6] Bräuer, G. (1978). "The morphological differentiation of anatomically modern man in Africa, with special regard to recent finds from East Africa". Zeitschrift für Morphologie und Anthropologie: 266–292. Retrieved 29 September 2017. [7] Holliday, T. W. (2015). "Population affinities of the Jebel Sahaba skeletal sample: Limb proportion evidence". International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. 25 (4): 466–476. Retrieved 29 September 2017. [IMG]https://archive.is/Pf8Do/9f6fd573e516453c530b57ff47a145d597109e0e.jpg[/IMG] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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