Mass graves at Tell Brak

Mass graves at Tell Brak

dating from ca. 3800 to 3600 BC, have been unearthed, suggesting advanced warfare around this period.

Late Chalcolithic mass graves at Tell Brak, Syria , and violent conflict during the growth of early city-states

Excavations and surveys carried out from the mid-1990s through 2009 at Tell Brak, northeast Syria, have focused on reconstructing the socioeconomic complexity and physical growth of one of northern Mesopotamia's earliest urban settlements. The recent discovery of several mass graves on the edge of the city, created at an important threshold in its physical expansion (ca. 3800–3600 B.C.), adds to a longstanding debate about the connection between the growth of early city-states and violent conflict. These graves, with their population of as many as several hundred primarily sub-adults and young adults, are interpreted as the result of large-scale violent events and may provide evidence for the post-mortem treatment of enemies. They offer a strong counterpoint to the dominant reconstruction of peaceful prehistory in the region.

Late Union archeological work in co-relation with similar work on other occupied planets, the historic and anecdotic accounts of other Union societies speak of a widespread war between advanced societies, that also included Earth. The core reason for these conflicts was explained by the desire of these societies to secure or to destroy the culture. society that brings forth the VESSEL. Most sources agree that the Prophecy suggested Earth specifically Homo Sapien s of the Second Humanity o be the cradle of the VESSEL.

One such conflict was fought between supporters of the Old Osirians and the  Annunaki just outside the old Proto City of Tell Brak