A woman in the far north of Scotland about 2,000 years ago was brainwashed and her bones were chopped up with tools, before being buried, a new analysis has revealed.
Highly unusual burials are giving archaeologists new insights into social networks and funerary traditions in prehistoric Britain.
archaeologists excavated low stone cemetery In 2000 near Loch Borralee, a lake in northern Scotland, local people reported the discovery of human bones dislodged from the soil by rabbits. The rectangular cave, or pile of stones, contained the partial skeletons of an adult and an adolescent, both buried during the Iron Age, between the 1st century BC and the 1st century AD.
When original report A new study published Wednesday (June 10) in the journal Nature suggests that the corpses at Loch Borralee were scratched and gnawed by rats or dogs. ancient timesFinds suggest that some bones were deliberately modified by humans in a funerary ritual that may have included worship of an important ancestor and cannibalism.
Researchers found that the adult skeleton, codenamed “Individual 1”, belonged to a woman who was over 30 years old when she died. There was an unusual fracture in the base of his skull, and an incision had been made inside his skull by a sharp instrument.
“Overall, the breakage of the cranial base and internal cut marks indicate deliberate removal of the brain shortly after this individual’s death,” the researchers wrote in the study. He suggested that the removal of the brain may have been related to cannibalism or may have resulted from an attempt to clean and preserve the skull for display.
Many of the arm and leg bones had been cut with tools and then replaced in anatomical position in the grave.
(Image credit: Castells Navarro et al./Antiquity Publications Ltd.)
Archaeologists also noticed that four of the woman’s bones – three arm bones and one leg bone – had been damaged, but had not been eaten by animals. “The inner layers of the bones have been truncated to a sharp edge and a pointed end,” the researchers wrote.
Get the world’s hottest discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.
Although the bones had apparently been modified after the woman’s death, someone took care to place them back in their tomb in their correct physical condition.
“The motivation behind the extensive manipulation of the skeletal remains of Person 1 is very difficult to explain,” study the first author. Laura Castells Navarroan archaeologist from the University of York in the UK said in a statement. “However, the care with which it was reassembled and deposited in the cairn probably suggests that it enjoyed a level of reverence and respect in its community.”
A map of the original excavation at Loch Borralee, showing where the two skeletons were found.
(Image credit: Castells Navarro et al./Antiquity Publications Ltd.)
The second skeleton in the cemetery, Individual 2, was that of a boy who was about 15 years old when he died. His skull and bones have not been tampered with in any way, but have been analyzed for ancient times dna Both skeletons revealed that these individuals may have been second cousins (sharing a pair of great-grandparents).
DNA analysis also revealed distant genetic relationships between the two Loch Boreal skeletons and those buried at other prehistoric Scottish sites, including the remote Orkney Islands. Although this part of Britain is sparsely populated today, there is an abundance of prehistoric graves scattered across the area nearly four millennia Suggests that people in ancient Scotland had complex social networks that they maintained over long distances.
“More broadly, our research shows that prehistoric maritime communities roamed around the north coast of Scotland and the Northern Isles from time to time, possibly in small groups,” Castells Navarro said.
Castells Navarro, L., Metz, S., Bleasdale, M., Evans, J., Legg, M., Buster, L., Reich, D., Armitt, I. (2026). Reuniting the dead in Iron Age Britain: funerary processing and long-distance connectivity at Loch Borralee, Scotland. ancient times 100(412). https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2026.10353
What do you know about the Empire’s conquest of the British Isles? Find out with us Roman Britain Quiz!