24 x 7 World News

A partial skeleton reveals the world’s oldest known shark attack

0

Somewhere off southeastern JapanтАЩs coast around 3,000 years ago, a shark attacked and killed a man who was likely fishing or shellfish diving. Afterward, the victimтАЩs fishing comrades presumably brought the body, minus its sheared off right leg and left hand, back to land for burial.

A new analysis of that unfortunate manтАЩs partial skeleton, excavated around a century ago at a village cemetery near JapanтАЩs Seto Inland Sea, has unveiled that grisly scenario. This individual from JapanтАЩs ancient J┼Нmon culture (SN: 2/15/97) represents the oldest known human victim of a shark attack, say archaeologist J. Alyssa White of the University of Oxford and colleagues. Radiocarbon dating places his death from 3,391 to 3,031 years ago, the researchers report in the August Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports.

A roughly 1,000-year-old skeleton of a fisherman on Puerto Rico previously displayed the earliest signs of a shark encounter.

WhiteтАЩs group documented at least 790 gouges, punctures and other types of bite damage mainly confined to the J┼Нmon manтАЩs arms, legs, pelvis and ribs. A 3-D model of these injuries indicates that the victim first lost his left hand trying to fend off a shark. Ensuing bites severed major leg arteries, rapidly leading to death.

After the manтАЩs body was recovered, his mutilated left leg probably detached and was placed on his chest when he was buried, the researchers say.

Numerous shark teeth found at some J┼Нmon sites suggest that sharks were hunted, perhaps by drawing them to blood while fishing at sea. тАЬBut unprovoked shark attacks would have been incredibly rare as sharks do not tend to target humans as prey,тАЭ White says.

Leave a Reply