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Highly selective cannibalism in the Late Pleistocene of Northern Europe reveals Neandertals were targeted prey.

Quentin Cosnefroy, Isabelle Crevecoeur, Patrick Semal et al.

41258124 PubMed ID
11 Authors
2025-11-19 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

QC
Quentin Cosnefroy
IC
Isabelle Crevecoeur
PS
Patrick Semal
MH
Mateja Hajdinjak
AB
Alba Bossoms Mesa
JK
Johannes Krause
GA
Guido Alberto Gnecchi-Ruscone
CP
Cosimo Posth
HB
Hervé Bocherens
TD
Thibaut Devièse
HR
Hélène Rougier
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Troisième caverne of Goyet has yielded the largest assemblage of Neandertal remains in Northern Europe with clear evidence of anthropogenic modifications. However, its skeletal fragmentation has long limited detailed morphological and behavioural study on the assemblage. In this study, we integrate palaeogenetic, isotopic, morphometric, and structural analyses of the long bones to assess the biological profiles of the Neandertals from Goyet and explore whether they present particularities that could shed light on the formation of this unique cannibalised assemblage. We identify a minimum of six individuals, including four adult or adolescent females. Compared to Homo sapiens and Neandertals-including regional specimens-the females from Goyet display short statures and reduced diaphyseal robusticity of their long bones. They lack skeletal markers associated with high mobility despite isotopic evidence for non-local origins. The overrepresentation of short, morphologically gracile, non-local females, alongside two immature individuals, suggests a strong selection bias in the individuals present at the site. Dated between 41,000 and 45,000 years ago, a period marked by Neandertal cultural diversity, biological decline and the arrival of Homo sapiens in Northern Europe, the cannibalised female and juvenile Neandertals from Goyet indicate exocannibalism, possibly linked to inter-group conflict, territoriality, and/or specific treatment of outsiders.

Chapter III

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