a skeleton lying partly on its right side in an excavated grave with archaeological sign and meter stick in view

A typical male burial from the Stone Age cemetery of Csőszhalom in Hungary. He is buried on his right side, with a polished stone tool near his left shoulder. (Image credit: Alexandra Anders)

A Stone Age woman buried with male-associated artifacts in what is now Hungary is revealing that her society embraced complex identities and flexible gender roles 7,000 years ago, a new study finds.

Sébastien Villotte, a researcher at the French National Center for Scientific Research, told Live Science in an email that there is no clear evidence this woman had a unique social role, such as shaman. The other people who were buried in ways that did not align with their biological sex may have had “individual trajectories that do not fit in with an ‘ideal’ pattern,” Villotte said. “This is the period in Central Europe when people began to express previously existing gender roles in a new arena.”

Villotte, S., Szeniczey, T., Kacki, S., & Anders, A. (2026). Fixed and fluid: The two faces of gender roles—A combined study of activity patterns and burial practices in the European Neolithic. American Journal of Biological Anthropology, 189(2), e70217. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.70217

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