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DNA reveals ancestry of man buried in Stone Age monument in Spain, but his religion remains a mystery

In medieval Spain, two men were buried in a prehistoric stone monument that had been constructed millennia earlier. Now, a new analysis of these burials is revealing clues about their ancestry but also leaving some mysteries, such as which religion they practiced.

For example, one of the men was related not only to European populations but also to people living in the Middle East and North Africa, including two people who are still alive today, according to the new genetic analysis.

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Part of the Menga Dolmen’s interior. The two burials were found in the atrium (near the entrance) of the monument. (Image credit: Miguel Ángel Blanco de la Rubia, courtesy of research group ATLAS, University of Sevilla)

In 2005, archaeologists unexpectedly found two additional burials within its atrium: one dating to around the eighth century or ninth century A.D. and another from around the 10th or 11th century, researchers wrote in a paper published in the February issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports.

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