Date: 8/09/2022 05:13:49
From: monkey skipper
ID: 1929492
Subject: 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery

31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery, experts say

A31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg and found in a remote Indonesian cave is believed to be the earliest known evidence of surgery, according to a peer-reviewed study that experts say rewrites understanding of human history.

An expedition team led by Australian and Indonesian archaeologists stumbled upon the skeletal remains while excavating a limestone cave in East Kalimantan, Borneo looking for ancient rock art in 2020.

Tile Insert Floor Waste Chrome
The finding turned out to be evidence of the earliest known surgical amputation, pre-dating other discoveries of complex medical procedures across Eurasia by tens of thousands of years.

By measuring the ages of a tooth and burial sediment using radioisotope dating, the scientists estimated the remains to be about 31,000 years old.

Palaeopathological analysis of the remains revealed bony growths on the lower left leg indicative of healing and suggesting the leg was surgically amputated several years before burial.

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

Dr Tim Maloney, a research fellow at Australia’s Griffith University who oversaw the excavation, said the discovery was an “absolute dream for an archaeologist”.

He said the research team, which included scientists from the Indonesian Institution for Archaeology and Conservation, was examining ancient cultural deposits when they crossed stone markers in the ground revealing a burial site.

After 11 days of excavation, they found the skeleton of a young hunter-gatherer with a healed stump where its lower left leg and foot had been severed.

Maloney said the nature of the healing, including the clean stump showed it was caused by amputation and not an accident or animal attack.

“ survived not just as a child, but as an adult amputee in this rainforest environment,” Maloney said. “Importantly, not only does lack infection, but it also lacks distinctive crushing.”

Prior to this discovery, Maloney said it had been widely accepted that amputation was a guaranteed death sentence until about 10,000 years ago, when surgical procedures advanced with the development of large settled agricultural societies.

The previous oldest evidence of a successful amputation was a 7,000-year-old skeleton of an elderly farmer from stone age France. His left arm was amputated above the elbow.

“This finding very much changes the known history of medical intervention and knowledge of humanity,” Maloney said.

“It implies that early people … had mastered complex surgical procedures allowing this person to survive after the removal of a foot and leg.”

Maloney said the stone age surgeon must have had detailed knowledge of anatomy, including veins, vessels and nerves, to avoid causing fatal blood loss and infection.

He said the successful operation suggested some form of intensive care, including regular disinfection post-operation.

Emeritus Prof Matthew Spriggs of the Australian National University School of Archaeology and Anthropology, who was not involved in the study, said the discovery was “an important rewrite of our species history” that “underlines yet again that our ancestors were as smart as we are, with or without the technologies we take for granted today”.

Spriggs said it should not be surprising that stone age people could have developed an understanding of the internal workings of mammals through hunting, and had treatments for infection and injury.

“We tend to forget that modern humans like us 30,000 years ago … would have had their intellectuals, their doctors, their inventors,” he said.

He said they would have had to experiment with plant medicines and other treatments to stay alive.

“Any inhabitants of tropical rainforests today, usually now mixing hunting and gathering with forms of agriculture, have a large pharmacopoeia that would have to have been developed over millennia.”

The study was published in the journal Nature.

Reply Quote

Date: 8/09/2022 09:37:38
From: dv
ID: 1929502
Subject: re: 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery

monkey skipper said:


31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery, experts say

A31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg and found in a remote Indonesian cave is believed to be the earliest known evidence of surgery, according to a peer-reviewed study that experts say rewrites understanding of human history.

An expedition team led by Australian and Indonesian archaeologists stumbled upon the skeletal remains while excavating a limestone cave in East Kalimantan, Borneo looking for ancient rock art in 2020.

Tile Insert Floor Waste Chrome
The finding turned out to be evidence of the earliest known surgical amputation, pre-dating other discoveries of complex medical procedures across Eurasia by tens of thousands of years.

By measuring the ages of a tooth and burial sediment using radioisotope dating, the scientists estimated the remains to be about 31,000 years old.

Palaeopathological analysis of the remains revealed bony growths on the lower left leg indicative of healing and suggesting the leg was surgically amputated several years before burial.

Sign up to receive an email with the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

Dr Tim Maloney, a research fellow at Australia’s Griffith University who oversaw the excavation, said the discovery was an “absolute dream for an archaeologist”.

He said the research team, which included scientists from the Indonesian Institution for Archaeology and Conservation, was examining ancient cultural deposits when they crossed stone markers in the ground revealing a burial site.

After 11 days of excavation, they found the skeleton of a young hunter-gatherer with a healed stump where its lower left leg and foot had been severed.

Maloney said the nature of the healing, including the clean stump showed it was caused by amputation and not an accident or animal attack.

“ survived not just as a child, but as an adult amputee in this rainforest environment,” Maloney said. “Importantly, not only does lack infection, but it also lacks distinctive crushing.”

Prior to this discovery, Maloney said it had been widely accepted that amputation was a guaranteed death sentence until about 10,000 years ago, when surgical procedures advanced with the development of large settled agricultural societies.

The previous oldest evidence of a successful amputation was a 7,000-year-old skeleton of an elderly farmer from stone age France. His left arm was amputated above the elbow.

“This finding very much changes the known history of medical intervention and knowledge of humanity,” Maloney said.

“It implies that early people … had mastered complex surgical procedures allowing this person to survive after the removal of a foot and leg.”

Maloney said the stone age surgeon must have had detailed knowledge of anatomy, including veins, vessels and nerves, to avoid causing fatal blood loss and infection.

He said the successful operation suggested some form of intensive care, including regular disinfection post-operation.

Emeritus Prof Matthew Spriggs of the Australian National University School of Archaeology and Anthropology, who was not involved in the study, said the discovery was “an important rewrite of our species history” that “underlines yet again that our ancestors were as smart as we are, with or without the technologies we take for granted today”.

Spriggs said it should not be surprising that stone age people could have developed an understanding of the internal workings of mammals through hunting, and had treatments for infection and injury.

“We tend to forget that modern humans like us 30,000 years ago … would have had their intellectuals, their doctors, their inventors,” he said.

He said they would have had to experiment with plant medicines and other treatments to stay alive.

“Any inhabitants of tropical rainforests today, usually now mixing hunting and gathering with forms of agriculture, have a large pharmacopoeia that would have to have been developed over millennia.”

The study was published in the journal Nature.

Amazing

Reply Quote

Date: 8/09/2022 12:57:33
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1929592
Subject: re: 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery

> A 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg and found in a remote Indonesian cave is believed to be the earliest known evidence of surgery.

Nice. A lower leg is quite a sizeable chunk of skeleton to remove.

For comparison. Trepanning, brain surgery, dates back 7,000 years.

Soft tissue surgery may be earlier, but the evidence wouldn’t fossilise well, and might be difficult to distinguish from a war wound.

Are there still tribes in the world who have never done any surgery? Probably not. I’ve heard a report of subtle surgery done by an aboriginal medicine man for the purpose of stealthy killing.

Reply Quote

Date: 9/09/2022 07:14:55
From: Witty Rejoinder
ID: 1929952
Subject: re: 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery

Humans were performing amputations earlier than thought
A new find in Borneo puts the advent of surgery back by almost 24,000 years
Sep 7th 2022

The eastern side of the island of Borneo—or Kalimantan, as it is known by the locals—is otherworldly. The island, which is bisected by the equator, is blanketed by tropical rainforest. The rock underfoot is limestone, the remains of prehistoric coral reefs heaved up from the ocean floor. Over millions of years, rivulets have carved into the stone, creating networks of caves, treacherous sinkholes, and imposing towers of rock called “karsts”.

Listen to this story. Enjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android.
The landscape could be straight out of an “Indiana Jones” film, which is appropriate, because the region is a hotspot for archaeologists. In a paper published this week in Nature, a team from Griffith University in Australia have announced perhaps the biggest archaeological find from the island yet. In Liang Tebo, a cave on the Sangkulirang–Mangkalihat Peninsula of eastern Borneo, scientists have excavated the oldest grave ever found in South-East Asia. The 31,000-year-old skeleton they found was missing its left foot and part of the left leg, showing compelling signs of surgical amputation. If correct, that means surgical procedures were being carried out some 24,000 years earlier in the archaeological record than previously thought.

“If you’re looking north from the main chamber of Liang Tebo, you’re surrounded by the cave,” says India Ella Dilkes-Hall, lead excavator on the dig. “Behind you is a higher second chamber, to your left is a higher third chamber, and then directly north, you are looking straight out at tropical rainforest.”

Supplied by researcher. : https://press.springernature.com/surgical-amputation-of-a-limb-31-000-years-ago-in-borneo/23349196
In early 2020, Dr Dilkes-Hall and colleagues excavated a small trench in the floor of the cathedral-sized main chamber, where they found the bones of a 20-year-old man, carefully buried with a small piece of red ochre next to his face. That is significant, because Borneo is home to some of the earliest known rock art. One of the oldest known examples of figurative art, a 40,000-year-old painting of a banteng (a type of wild cattle), is located in Lubang Jeriji Saleh cave, a short trek away.

But as startling as what was found is what was missing: the man’s left leg and foot, from the last third of his shin down. “The recovered parts of the left tibia and fibula present with a very unusual bony growth which closely matches clinical instances of deliberate amputation,” says Timothy Maloney, a lead author of the latest study. The surface of the bone suggests that the young man underwent amputation as a child and survived for six to nine years after the fact, recovering well and apparently thriving as an amputee. To pull off such a sophisticated medical procedure would have required detailed knowledge of human anatomy and the ability to negotiate exposed tissue, veins, arteries and nerves, never mind the risk of infections.

“There is a strong case to be made that these communities had an understanding of antiseptic and antimicrobial management, potentially taking advantage of the impressive plant biodiversity of the region,” says Dr Maloney. The find overturns existing assumptions that sophisticated medical knowledge only took off in Europe around 7,000 years ago. Indeed, it suggests that humans may have been performing sophisticated medical procedures in South-East Asia while humanity’s close cousins, the Neanderthals, still roamed southern Europe.

https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2022/09/07/humans-were-performing-amputations-earlier-than-thought?

Reply Quote

Date: 9/09/2022 12:52:57
From: SCIENCE
ID: 1930115
Subject: re: 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery

there you go turns out Indonesians were the most advanced society back in those days damn

Reply Quote

Date: 9/09/2022 13:35:04
From: Michael V
ID: 1930137
Subject: re: 31,000-year-old skeleton missing its lower left leg is earliest known evidence of surgery

Interesting, thanks.

Reply Quote