ISLE OF WIGHT, ENGLAND—Last year, two brothers discovered a set of human
remains in the silt on Fishbourne Beach at low tide. The skeleton was
lying on its left-hand side with its arms against its chest and legs
bent. No clothing or other objects were found. According to On the Wight,
local officials decided to recover as many of the bones as possible
before the tide came in. A postmortem conducted by pathologist Basil
Purdue concluded that the bones were ancient and belonged to a woman
whose upper left arm bone and left collarbone were shorter than those on
the right side of her body. She may have had a congenital deformity, or
perhaps had suffered from a stroke that caused muscle wasting in the
years before her death. Radiocarbon dating revealed the remains were
nearly 2,000 years old. Barrister Caroline Sumeray explained that the
remains will be housed at the Isle of Wight Museum. “They will be
appropriately and ethically stored and recorded as per national
guidelines for the treatment of human remains,” she said.
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