31,000-Year-Old Skeleton Missing Foot May Show Oldest Amputation

Archaeologists have uncovered a skeleton of a person who lived 31,000 years ago. According to a new study, the individual is missing its left foot, and part of its left leg reveals the oldest known evidence of amputation.

Discovered on the island of Borneo, the remains pre-date the previously oldest known case of limb amputation by more than 20,000 years and indicate that the individual survived for several years after the surgery. The finding, published in Nature, suggests that some ancient people were proficient nurses and performed sophisticated medical procedures much earlier than scientists have thought.

The human skeleton found in Borneo, dated to about 31,000 years ago, pictured in a cave in East Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia is photographed on March 4, 2020. The remains, which have been dated to 31,000 years old, mark the oldest evidence for amputation yet discovered. And the prehistoric “surgery” could show that humans were making medical advances much earlier than previously thought, according to the study published Wednesday, Sept.

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