It’s been an exciting year of research, a lot of imaging, and new collaborations.
If you’d like to collaborate or want a copy of any of these articles, feel free to reach out! 🤝✨
#Bioarchaeology #Paleoimaging #Mesolithic #Paleolithic #Anthropology
It’s been an exciting year of research, a lot of imaging, and new collaborations.
If you’d like to collaborate or want a copy of any of these articles, feel free to reach out! 🤝✨
#Bioarchaeology #Paleoimaging #Mesolithic #Paleolithic #Anthropology
📌 Imaging Diagnosis of Probable Osteomyelitis in a 9-Month-Old Infant From Prehistoric Brazil
Case study shedding light on early-life pathology and contributing to broader discussions of healthcare and funerary practices in prehistoric South America.
🔗 sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915...
📌 The Non-Adult Burials of Cabeço da Amoreira, Muge (Portugal)
This article presents new findings on infant and child burials, offering updated perspectives on funerary behavior and the role of non-adults in Mesolithic communities.
🔗 www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
📌 Paleoimagiologia aplicada aos concheiros de Muge.
Through 3D imaging, we analysed anatomical variation at Mesolithic Muge, offering new perspectives on these iconic shell middens.
🔗 www.researchgate.net/publication/...
📌 Underneath the Surface: Examining “Hidden Lesions” With Paleoimaging at Moita do Sebastião (Mesolithic Muge, Portugal)
Paleoimaging revealed changes invisible macroscopically, allowing discussions on health status, normal variability, and taphonomy
🔗 onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Wrapping up the year by highlighting the 2025 publications!
📌 Understanding the Origin of Superficial Bone Changes in the Qafzeh 9 Skull
Micro-CT clarified the origin of frontal bone changes on this well-known fossil and helped discuss variability.
🔗 onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Can you identify this fossil? #fossilfriday
For #fossilfriday let's play a game, guess the fossil!
Would you like to see more “guess the fossil” games on Fridays? 🧐
For #fossilfriday let's play a game, guess the fossil!
Just found out I didn’t get another grant I applied for. Disappointed, but still motivated to keep pushing forward. If anyone knows of opportunities (grants, contracts, collaborations, preferably in Portugal/Spain), I’d be very grateful for any leads. #Funding #Research
#FossilFriday Qafzeh 9 skull. Right side of the frontal bone with notable bone changes above the orbital region. From Coutinho-Nogueira, Coqueugniot & Tillier (2025)
Just found out I didn’t get another grant I applied for. Disappointed, but still motivated to keep pushing forward. If anyone knows of opportunities (grants, contracts, collaborations, preferably in Portugal/Spain), I’d be very grateful for any leads. #Funding #Research
How did Europe’s last hunter-gatherer-fisher communities bury their dead?
New excavations at the #Mesolithic site of Cabeço da Amoreira (Portugal) uncover 3 non-adult burials, shedding light on funerary practices, childhood, and life 8,000 years ago.
🔗 www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
Analysis of child burials at Cabeço da Amoreira highlights diverse Mesolithic funerary practices and offers new perspectives on social and cultural dynamics during the hunter-gatherer to farmer transition. doi.org/g92zmr
CAM 2023-7 shows that Mesolithic communities invested time, care, and symbolism in their burials, even for children.
A rare window into the humanity of 8,000 years ago.
#FossilFriday #Mesolithic #Archaeology
This was no ordinary burial.
It points to special treatment not commonly described at Muge.
But why? 🧐
• Social status?
• A different group?
• Chronological differences?
The child lay on their back (dorsal decubitus), head to the northeast.
Arms flexed across the chest, legs drawn up tight (hyperflexed).
This position suggests careful placement, maybe even wrapping in perishable material.
Associated elements included:
• Wild boar bones (hemi-mandibles & a tooth) 🐗
• Turtle shells 🐢
• Closed cockle shells (Cerastoderma edule) 🐚
• Charcoal & ochre 🎨
The child was laid in a shallow depression, carefully prepared with:
• Shells (Scrobicularia plana) under the head 🐚
• Clay with plant impressions 🌿
• A thin layer of sand
It was a constructed structure.
In 2023, excavations at Cabeço da Amoreira uncovered a child, ~8.5 years old.
Unlike most burials at the site, this one was prepared with care and symbolism.
The Muge region (central Portugal) is famous for its Mesolithic shell mounds.
These were used, among other things, as necropolis for the last hunter-gatherer-fishers of Western Europe (~8200–7100 years ago).
For #FossilFriday: Meet CAM 2023-7, a Mesolithic child buried ~8,000 years ago in Portugal.
Their burial is one of the most elaborate ever found in the Muge shell mounds. What made it so special? 🐚🧵
#Mesolithic #Funerary #Paleoanthropology www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
Oh nice! I’ll make sure he sees this 😅 Thanks
Together, these discoveries expand our understanding of how Mesolithic communities in Iberia cared for their non-adult dead and open new avenues for research on childhood, and funerary practices in prehistory.
The complex burial of CAM 2023-7 shows parallels with some adult graves at the site (see Umbelino et al. 2016). This suggests that elaborate treatment in funerary contexts was not limited to adults.
The differences observed in these burials—such as body position, presence/absence of material associated, and type of structure—point to variability in funerary practices among Mesolithic groups in the Tagus Valley.
These burials reveal striking variability:
➡️ Different body orientations
➡️ With/without associated material
➡️ Simple vs. complex structure (e.g., CAM 2023-7 laid in prepared layers of clay & shells)
Since 2019, 3 new non-adult burials were found:
• CAM 2019-5: ~9 yo, buried in a tightly flexed position
• CAM 2022-6: perinate, possibly stillborn
• CAM 2023-7: ~8 yo, buried with shells, ochre, and faunal remains