Two infants were buried some 2,100 years ago wearing āhelmetsā made from the skulls of other children, archaeologists have discovered.
The remains of the two infants were found with nine other burials at a site called Salango, on the coast of central Ecuador. The archaeologists who excavated the burials between 2014 and 2016 recently published the details of their findings in the journal Latin American Antiquity.
The team says this is the only known case in which childrenās skulls were used as helmets for infants being buried. The scientists donāt know what killed the infants and children.
The helmets were placed tightly over the infantsā heads, the archaeologists found. Itās likely that the older childrenās skulls still had flesh on them when they were turned into helmets, because without flesh, the helmets likely would not have held together, the archaeologists noted.
One infantās āface looked through and out of the cranial vaultā ā the space in the skull that holds the brain ā the archaeologists wrote. Read more.