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Ditch full of 7,000-year-old headless human skeletons discovered in Slovakia, baffling archaeologists

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CitrixNews Staff
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Ditch full of 7,000-year-old headless human skeletons discovered in Slovakia, baffling archaeologists
a composite image of aerial photos of excavated graves with an illustration of the individual skeletons The mass burial of skeletons in the settlement ditch (below) with drawings of the individual skeletons (above). (Image credit: Katharina Fuchs, Agnes Heitmann, Nils Müller-Scheeßel, Till Kühl) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

At the entrance to a Stone Age neighborhood in Slovakia, archaeologists have uncovered a ditch full of headless human skeletons.

While the bones reveal cut marks that signal decapitation, researchers think the practice was not a violent mass killing but rather part of a complex burial ritual more than 7,000 years ago. In other words, the individuals were likely beheaded postmortem.

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several archaeologists excavated a mass burial underneath a white tent

Archaeologists excavating skeletons at the site of Vráble in Slovakia.

(Image credit: Katharina Fuchs)RELATED STORIES

Article Sources

Furholt, M., Cheben, I., Hukel'ová, Z., Wunderlich, M., Bistáková, A., Furholt, K., Kühl, T., Müller-Scheeßel, N., Fuchs, K. (2026). Neolithic bodies in Vráble – 7000 year-old headless human skeletons in an enclosed LBK settlement in south-west Slovakia. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. https://doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2026.10082

Kristina KillgroveKristina KillgroveStaff writer

Kristina Killgrove is a staff writer at Live Science with a focus on archaeology and paleoanthropology news. Her articles have also appeared in venues such as Forbes, Smithsonian, and Mental Floss. Kristina holds a Ph.D. in biological anthropology and an M.A. in classical archaeology from the University of North Carolina, as well as a B.A. in Latin from the University of Virginia, and she was formerly a university professor and researcher. She has received awards from the Society for American Archaeology and the American Anthropological Association for her science writing.

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Originally reported by Live Science