Archaeologists in northern Malawi have uncovered what may be the world’s oldest cremation pyre containing adult remains, reshaping ideas about early human societies.
Discovered at the foot of Mount Hora, this ancient site dates back roughly 9,500 years. The carefully constructed pyre held burned bone fragments from an adult woman, along with ash, charcoal, and stone tools that point to deliberate ritual activity.
These indicate a highly sophisticated funerary process, with the evidence suggesting the body was carefully prepared and moved during the fire. Curiously, the woman’s skull was missing, leading researchers to believe grieving relatives may have kept bones as sacred tokens of remembrance.
This extraordinary discovery proves that ancient hunter-gatherer societies possessed deeply complex social roles and spiritual beliefs long before previously thought.

