DNA Pinpoints Northern Britain’s Oldest Known Mesolithic Burial

TL;DR Summary
DNA analysis of an 11,000-year-old child from Heaning Wood Cave in Cumbria confirms the remains belong to a young girl and marks her as Northern Britain’s oldest known burial from the Mesolithic era. The find, one of the NW European region’s oldest Mesolithic burials, includes a perforated deer tooth and shell beads radiocarbon dated to about 11,000 years ago, suggesting deliberate burial practices by early hunter-gatherers. Local archaeologist Martin Stables helped uncover the site, which also reveals multiple burials across distinct periods, underscoring long-term use of caves for funerary rites in post-Ice Age Britain.
- DNA Reveals Identity of Britain’s 11,000-Year-Old “Oldest Northerner” SciTechDaily
- News - Remains of England's Earliest Known "Northerner" Belong to Mesolithic Girl Archaeology Magazine
- Northern Britain's oldest human remains are of a young female child, DNA analysis reveals Phys.org
- 11,000-year-old British baby girl’s bones unearthed in cave, rewrite history Interesting Engineering
- Earliest known burial in Northern Britain identified as young girl through DNA analysis Archaeology News Online Magazine
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