February 11, 2009 4:57 PM

Mystery Of Mass Grave Solved

(AP)  It was a chilling discovery: a mass grave of human bones — skulls smashed and scorched by fire, dog bites on a child's thigh bone, a forehead with an apparent bullet hole.

Three years after the discovery, by workers digging up the cloisters of a 17th-century Franciscan convent, forensic experts and historians say they have solved the mystery.

They say the estimated 3,000 dead in the grave were victims of the earthquake that devastated Lisbon in 1755, and that this is the first mass grave of its kind ever found in the Portuguese capital.

"You didn't have to be a genius to work it out. The evidence is overwhelming," says Miguel Telles Antunes, curator of the Academy of Sciences Museum who coordinated the investigation. "This could only have been some singular, calamitous event."

The quake, which included a tsunami and a fire that raged for six days, was one of the deadliest catastrophes ever to hit western Europe. It is thought to have killed up to 60,000 people, and it destroyed much of the wealthy and elegant capital of a Portuguese empire stretching across Asia, Africa and Latin America.

Historians had a rough picture of what happened on Nov. 1, 1755, but detailed accounts were scarce. Now the mass grave presents a vivid and gruesome tableau of the past.

"We had clues about what occurred. Now we have the proof," Telles Antunes said.

The thick-walled convent, parts of which survived the quake, now houses the Academy of Sciences, which distributed the remains among forensic scientists in several fields. Those sleuths, using the latest technology in a kind of C.S.I. Lisbon, gradually reconstructed events.

The mass grave held not just human remains but animal and fish bones, bits of pottery and ceramics, clay pipes, buttons, medallions, rosaries and even a thimble. All predated the quake.

Historians knew from public records that authorities hastily buried the dead to prevent an epidemic, but they didn't know where. The grave shows just how pressured they were.

"When they gathered up the bodies to cart them away, they also scooped up bits of whatever else was lying around," says Joao Luis Cardoso, a professor of archaeology at the Open University in Lisbon who oversaw the dig.

Cristiana Pereira, a forensic dentist at Lisbon University, was given 1,099 teeth from the grave.

Using the same procedures employed to identify victims in mass graves in the former Yugoslavia and from the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, she classified 79 victims, including babies.

The largest age group was 17-35, leading her to conclude the city had a young population. The teeth also showed few signs of decay, in part, presumably, because few people could afford the sugar imported from Portuguese colonial plantations in Africa and Brazil.

"It's all helping to fill in the blanks," she said.

The remains included a black woman. Other evidence of Portugal's slave-trading past were bones from a monkey — presumably a pet — and small sea shells that constituted currency for buying slaves.

Many skulls had been crushed, probably by quake-struck masonry and timber beams.

From a glass cabinet in his office, Telles Antunes pulls out the skull of a child about three years old. A small, sharp stone still juts from the skull, indicating a fatal injury from a collapsed building.

Scientists also analyzed charcoal, partly melted medallions and sand that had turned into glass — all dug out of the grave. They deduced that temperatures in the post-quake fire reached 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit.

The dog-bitten thigh bone suggests animals scavenging for food. The knife marks on another human bone imply meat was scraped from it, though some experts say the evidence of cannibalism is inconclusive.

Authorities sent troops to restore order, begin the cleanup and deal with looters. Two round lead bullets were found in the mass grave, and one skull had a hole that appeared made by a bullet.

"You can begin to imagine what a hellish time it must have been," says Telles Antunes.

Experts arrived at the estimate of 3,000 by extrapolating from what was found. Only a small part of the mass grave was excavated, and part of it is viewable by the public under glass.

"What we've found out so far is just the tip of the iceberg," says Cardoso, the archaeologist. "They'll still be researching this find long after I'm gone."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by May 1, 2007 5:59 PM EDT
I see a couple of posts concerning newster1 but do not see any posts by him (her?) whats up with that?
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by puzzler125 May 1, 2007 3:38 PM EDT
Proof? Look up the myth of the mound builders and then rethink your proof and assumptions. In archaeology (Intro. to...)class we're learning not to assume and to take what is discovered with a "grain of salt" as it were. There are an awful lot of assumptions that are now stated as proof in this article!
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by jeanyar May 1, 2007 3:24 PM EDT
The New Madrid earthquake DID NOT disrupt the econocies of the Southern US or the Mid-West of the early 1800's...there wasn't much of an economic base at that time...there were few white people in the area other than trappers, traders and hunters. And the Native Americans of the region were subsistance farmers, hunters and traders living in small to medium sized villages. Today, however, there are large cities built surrounding the New Madrid that would be devastated by a similar magnitude earthquake.
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by montraville April 30, 2007 11:14 PM EDT
...and we're not much better prepared for earthquakes these days. Even with our modern construction, in the US a new Cascadia (Washington) or New Madrid (Missouri) earthquake could be mega-disasterous. The New Madrid quake in the early 1800s crippled the economy of the South and Midwest for years, and there has never been a Cascadia quake in our memory. California is not the only danger zone around. Both of these other regions historically have had far worse quakes in the disatant past.
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by Razzl April 30, 2007 8:50 PM EDT
This fascinating and repelling discovery will be like the Pompeii of Lisbon as the chilling details of the disaster reveal themselves from the grave. It's surprising how much information can be gleaned from so many small things, scraps and bones and debris. It's also interesting that the disaster was so encompassing that the story of the event is almost untold, like Pompeii and Herculaneum being literally forgotten by the People of Naples because none survived to hand down the tale...
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by jdeltoro1 April 30, 2007 6:34 PM EDT
yeah, newster1 probably has some issues. It's an interesting news piece, but the reporters are always on top of things when there is a hint of scandal within the Church. And they are very open about identifying it as a scandal. This piece isn't one of those times.
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by canaima April 30, 2007 6:12 PM EDT
newster1, there's no evidence mentioned in this article to suggest that these victims were anything other than quake victims. To suggest otherwise is pure conjecture based on your own personal opinions.

Don't try to make this story something other than what it is. Nobody cares what your own personal bias is.
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by nzrqv7 April 30, 2007 4:53 PM EDT
Man, what a cheerful thought. You must be very angry at the church.
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