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Jebel Sahaba
Prehistoric cemetery site in the Nile Valley / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jebel Sahaba, is a place or site in which evidence of past activity is preserved near the northern borders of Sudan with Egypt. It is near the Aswan High Dam,[3] archaeologists found 61 remains of early hunter-gatherers. These included men, women, and children. Before the discovery in 1960, many experts had thought that in prehistoric times, people did not fight each other. That turned out wrong when Fred Wendorf discovered bones from the 12th millennium B.C. These contained a large number of injuries, damaged bones, and pieces of flint arrows.[4]
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Quick Facts Violence at Jebel Sahaba, Date ...
Violence at Jebel Sahaba | |||||
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Part of resource competition in the Nile valley | |||||
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Belligerents | |||||
Qadan people (probably) | |||||
Casualties and losses | |||||
61 killed |
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More information Name, Age ...
Name | Age | Cause of Death | Location of Death | Location of Birth |
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JS 14 [1] | c.13400[2] | Projectiles | Jebel Sahaba | Unknown |
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![Jebel Sahaba: Remains of "JS 14"](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Location_and_images_of_the_observed_osseous_lesions_on_Jebel_Sahaba_skeleton_%22JS_14%22.webp/640px-Location_and_images_of_the_observed_osseous_lesions_on_Jebel_Sahaba_skeleton_%22JS_14%22.webp.png)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d0/Sudan_Egypt_Locator.png/640px-Sudan_Egypt_Locator.png)