By Dani Cooper.
Evidence of a massacre about 10,000 years ago has been unearthed in Africa, pushing back the known record of inter-group warfare.
Skeletal remains of 27 individuals, including at least eight women and six children, were found at Nataruk, about 30 kilometres west of Lake Turkana in Kenya.
Twelve of the fossilised remains were in an almost-complete state and revealed the victims had died a violent death, with signs of severe blows to the head and face, broken bones and arrow wounds.
Four individuals were found in a position that suggested their hands had been tied. One of these was a woman in the late stages of pregnancy - foetal bones were found in her abdominal cavity.
The remarkable discovery, led by researchers from Cambridge University's Leverhulme Centre for Human Evolutionary Studies, is outlined in today's Nature journal.
Co-author Professor Rainer Grun, from Australia's Griffith University, who played a key role in dating the remains, said that until now, the fossil evidence for war suggested it coincided with the start of agricultural practices.
"As soon as people stayed in one place, there is lots of evidence of war in all societies," he said, pointing to Syria, Egypt and the Mayan empire as examples.
"The question is whether this [warfare] happened with hunter-gatherers.
"There has been evidence of people killing each other before but it is singular. So certainly this is one of the earliest examples where you see a whole group wiped out."
The remains were found partly or completely exposed in 2012, preserved in sediment of a lagoon that has long since dried.
Radiocarbon and uranium dating techniques used on the skeletons and sediment and shell samples, place the attack as happening between 9500 and 10,500 years ago.