
A human that lived over 12,000 years ago in east Africa probably had facial piercings, making this the oldest known example of a facial piercing in Africa, and the second oldest in the world. The finding suggests humans have been wearing facial piercings in Africa since deep in prehistory.
“We’re potentially opening a window into the life of this individual,” says John Willman at the University of Coimbra in Portugal. Piercings and other body modifications “are often associated with social maturation, things like puberty and rites of passage”, he says.
The fossil is that of a young adult male, known as Olduvai Hominid 1, or OH1. in Olduvai gorge in Tanzania, one of the most famous hominin fossil sites. “It’s technically the first hominin fossil discovered in Olduvai gorge,” says Willman. However, , OH1 hadn’t been studied much until recently when newer methods became available.
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Prehistoric piercing
In 1993, researchers noted , which they thought was due to chewing tough plant material. “I took one look at it and said ‘no’,” says Willman. He has studied the skeletons of First Peoples from Canada, who often wore facial piercings that left distinctive marks on their teeth, and says the marks on OH1’s teeth are “a dead ringer for that sort of thing”.
Willman and his colleagues re-examined and measured OH1’s teeth and jawbone. They found that the incisor teeth were worn at the front. “It looks almost like somebody took the front end off these teeth with an ice cream scoop,” he says.
Towards the back of the mouth, the premolars and molars were also worn. “All the curvature you can feel when you run your tongue over your cheek teeth is virtually gone,” says Willman.
The team believes these wear patterns mean OH1 had three facial piercings: a “labret” through his lower lip, and one in each cheek. Because they haven’t been preserved, we don’t know what they were made of or what they looked like.
OH1 lived between 12,000 and 20,000 years ago, suggesting humans have been wearing facial piercings for at least that long. Previously, most of the evidence for piercings came from fossils of humans who were alive in the last 5000 years. “We see a lot of them in later prehistory, but not this long ago,” says Willman.
He has found evidence of people in central Europe , which is the oldest instance on record. However, OH1 is “the oldest in Africa that we know of”, he says.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology