
Ancient Scottish Burial Reveals Brain Removal and Bone Tools in Iron Age Rituals
A 2,000-year-old burial at Loch Borralie in northern Scotland shows an older woman’s skull with brain-removal markings and arm bones whittled into tools placed back in the grave, alongside a nearby adolescent whose remains were unmodified. The researchers say the motivation is unclear, with brain removal possibly tied to cannibalism or skull display. Ancient DNA links Individual 1 and a ~15-year-old Individual 2 as second cousins and connects them to other prehistoric Scottish sites, suggesting Iron Age maritime networks and long-distance social ties across the north coast of Britain.