When hunting for food, our ancient ancestors ensured that it was not just the animal’s meat that was used in a meaningful way.
Highly respected and treated as a wellspring of life, a harvest would have multi-purposes – whether as food, shelter, clothing or relics. In this vein, the practice of displaying skulls for decoration, or even as structural components of dwellings, can be traced back to Cro-Magnon man’s use of mammoth bones 25,000 years ago.
Significant too, 11,000-year-old spiritualised deer masks have been discovered at a Mesolithic archaeological site in North Yorkshire, England. These artefacts are thought to be the oldest traces of shamanic and religious behaviour in the world.
In more recent history, the Native American culture is renowned for its skull art painting and petroglyphs carved onto…