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In the 1970s, the remains of at least 37 individuals were discovered deep within a 15-meter (49-foot) shaft at Charterhouse Warren in Somerset, England. Recent analysis of over 3,000 bone fragments from this site has revealed a brutal and unsettling story of violence, butchery, and likely cannibalism in Early Bronze Age Britain, dating between 2500 and 1500 BC. These findings, published in the journal Antiquity, challenge the previously held notion that this period was relatively peaceful.
The assemblage includes men, women, and children, indicating that an entire community may have been wiped out. The bones bear signs of blunt force trauma to the skulls, suggesting these people were violently killed. More disturbingly, cut marks and fractures made around the time of death imply the victims were not only butchered but may have been partially consumed by their enemies. This represents the largest known instance of interpersonal violence in British prehistory.
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