Scientific Reports (Dec 2021)

An infant burial from Arma Veirana in northwestern Italy provides insights into funerary practices and female personhood in early Mesolithic Europe

  • Jamie Hodgkins,
  • Caley M. Orr,
  • Claudine Gravel-Miguel,
  • Julien Riel-Salvatore,
  • Christopher E. Miller,
  • Luca Bondioli,
  • Alessia Nava,
  • Federico Lugli,
  • Sahra Talamo,
  • Mateja Hajdinjak,
  • Emanuela Cristiani,
  • Matteo Romandini,
  • Dominique Meyer,
  • Danylo Drohobytsky,
  • Falko Kuester,
  • Geneviève Pothier-Bouchard,
  • Michael Buckley,
  • Lucia Mancini,
  • Fabio Baruffaldi,
  • Sara Silvestrini,
  • Simona Arrighi,
  • Hannah M. Keller,
  • Rocío Belén Griggs,
  • Marco Peresani,
  • David S. Strait,
  • Stefano Benazzi,
  • Fabio Negrino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-02804-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The evolution and development of human mortuary behaviors is of enormous cultural significance. Here we report a richly-decorated young infant burial (AVH-1) from Arma Veirana (Liguria, northwestern Italy) that is directly dated to 10,211–9910 cal BP (95.4% probability), placing it within the early Holocene and therefore attributable to the early Mesolithic, a cultural period from which well-documented burials are exceedingly rare. Virtual dental histology, proteomics, and aDNA indicate that the infant was a 40–50 days old female. Associated artifacts indicate significant material and emotional investment in the child’s interment. The detailed biological profile of AVH-1 establishes the child as the earliest European near-neonate documented to be female. The Arma Veirana burial thus provides insight into sex/gender-based social status, funerary treatment, and the attribution of personhood to the youngest individuals among prehistoric hunter-gatherer groups and adds substantially to the scant data on mortuary practices from an important period in prehistory shortly following the end of the last Ice Age.