homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Fossilized poop shows ancient hunter-gatherer ate a rattlesnake whole -- fangs included

This was one very eccentric individual.

Tibi Puiu
April 24, 2019 @ 10:23 pm

share Share

A rattlesnake fang found in 1,500-year-old fossilized poop. Credit: E. M. Sonderman.

A rattlesnake fang found in 1,500-year-old fossilized poop. Credit: E. M. Sonderman.

More than 1,500 years ago, a really brave hunter-gatherer ate an entire rattlesnake, including its one-centimeter-long fangs. We know about this because the fangs and other traces of the snake were pooped out, becoming fossilized as coprolites which archaeologists discovered in a rock shelter in southwest Texas. This is the first evidence of whole-snake consumption in the fossil record.

These coprolites were part of a collection of over 1,000 such samples collected during the 1960s in Conejo Shelter, found in Lower Pecos Canyonlands, Texas. Archaeologists believe that humans have inhabited the region for 12,000-14,000 years. Judging from the quality and quantity of coprolites found at the rock shelter, the site seems to have served the role of a latrine.

Analyzing ancient poop under a microscope might not sound like the glamorous work you’d expect to see in movies about archaeology. But, in reality, this kind of work can be quite exciting. By studying fossilized feces it is possible to discern what ancient people’s diets looked like thousands of years ago, essentially learning more about their way of life than most ruins or shards of pottery could ever reveal. The individual also consumed an assortment of plants like Agave lechuguilla and Liliaceae flowers, Dasylirion fibers, and an Opuntia cactus.

Pecos River style pictographs in Rattlesnake Canyon. You can see a rattlesnake depiction on the left of a dark shaman figure. Credit: Steve Black.

Pecos River style pictographs in Rattlesnake Canyon. You can see a rattlesnake depiction on the left of a dark shaman figure. Credit: Steve Black.

The coprolites were carbon dated to around 1,500 years ago, almost a millennium before the first European set foot on the continent. These pre-Columbian hunter-gatherers who lived in the region likely had to deal with quite a lot of adversity during that time. The harsh desert conditions mean that there wasn’t that much food to forage, so anything that an individual could find to eat was precious, whether rodents, rabbits, or even venomous snakes.

However, this eccentric hunter-gatherer likely didn’t consume the rattlesnake for substance. Instead, researchers have a hunch that the viper — which was either a western diamondback rattlesnake or copperhead — was devoured whole for ritualistic purposes. It’s not uncommon for people of that age to consume venomous snakes, but they would do so only after removing the heat, rattle, and skin prior to cooking. Secondly, the other foodstuff found in the same coprolites samples suggests that the hunter-gatherer wasn’t particularly starving or desperate for food. Another clue that the snake dinner might have been part of a ritual lies in the rock art made by Lower Pecos people, which frequently depicts snakes.

“Future analyses of coprolites from this lens and the surrounding contexts will further our current understanding of this unique gastrological event and better situate it in the context of diet patterns and paleoenvironmental adaptions in the Lower Pecos,” the authors wrote.

The findings appeared in the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports.

 

 

share Share

This Chip Trains AI Using Only Light — And It’s a Game Changer

Forget electricity — this new AI chip from Penn learns using light.

Scientists Tracked Countless Outcomes of Spanking Children and Found Zero Benefits. On the Contrary, There Is Only Harm

Even in countries where it’s culturally acceptable, physical punishment leads to negative outcomes.

Humans are really bad at healing. But that also helped us survive

It's a quirk tied to our thick skin, sweat glands, and sparse body hair.

This ancient South American culture used ritual drugs to reinforce social hierarchy

High in the Peruvian Andes, archaeologists uncovered snuff tubes containing traces of hallucinogens.

This Scottish Field Could Be the World’s Oldest Football Pitch

A quiet Scottish pasture may upend everything we thought we knew about football’s birthplace.

Oldest Wine in the World Still in Liquid From Found Inside 2,000-Year-Old Roman Funeral Urn With Human Ashes

You wouldn't want to drink from this 2,000-year-old vintage though.

A Mysterious Warrior Society Buried 900 Artifacts on This Hill in Hungary 3,000 Years Ago

The artifacts may help archaeologists learn more about the chaotic transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age.

Ancient Chinese Poems Reveal Tragic Decline of Yangtze’s Endangered Porpoise

Researchers used over 700 ancient Chinese poems to trace 1,400 years of ecological change

Scientists Have Taken the First Ever Photos of Atoms Interacting in Free Space

The new quantum microscope shows particles behaving exactly as predicted by theory.

Finland Just Banned Smartphones in Schools

Do you agree with this approach?