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Aztec shrieking death whistles struck otherworldly fear, scientists find

Whistles produce ‘aversive and scream-like’ shrieking sounds, researchers say

Vishwam Sankaran
Wednesday 20 November 2024 06:24 EST
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Related: Archaeology breakthrough as student discovers huge Mayan city in Mexican jungle by accident

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Aztec “skull whistles” found in ancient gravesites were designed to produce shrieking sounds and instil “otherworldly” fear even in modern people, scientists say.

Archaeologists have uncovered several versions of these skull-shaped clay whistles from Aztec gravesites dating from about 1250 to 1521AD.

Many have been found to work today just as they likely did during ancient rituals following which the artefacts were buried next to a person in a grave.

Previous research has found the whistles produce “aversive and scream-like” shrieking sounds.

The sounds are produced as air is pushed through different parts of the whistle before colliding.

Three original skull whistle exemplars from the collection of the Ethnological Museum in Berlin
Three original skull whistle exemplars from the collection of the Ethnological Museum in Berlin (Claudia Obrocki)

Scientists have suspected that the whistles were meaningful either for sacrificial practices, mythological symbolism, or for intimidation in warfare.

But evidence for any of these theories has been missing.

In a new study, published in the journal Communications Psychology, researchers at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, recorded the neurological and psychological responses of volunteers who listened to the sounds produced by the whistles.

The volunteers rated the sounds “very negative” and labelled them as “scary and aversive”. The shrieking sounds potentially triggered “urgent response tendencies” and interfere with “ongoing mental processes” of the listeners, the study notes.

Ancient civilizations of China and Peru share deep reverence for nature

The whistles were perceived as having an eerie “unfamiliar” origin, mimicking startling sounds known to be produced by both nature and technology.

“Whistles thus seem unique sound tools with specific psycho-affective effects on listeners,” researchers note in their study.

“They were psychoacoustically classified as a hybrid mix of being voice- and scream-like but also originating from technical mechanisms.”

Analysis of brain activity of the volunteers at the time of listening indicates the brains were likely tuned to evaluate the emotional nature of the sound.

Human sacrifice with original skull whistle
Human sacrifice with original skull whistle (Salvador Guillien Arroyo)

Based on these observations, researchers say the skull whistles were likely used to scare the human sacrifice or the ceremonial audience.

“Aztec communities might have capitalised on the scary and scream-like nature of skull whistles,” they say, adding that ritual use of the whistles during human sacrifice was more likely than the warfare hypothesis.

They add, however, that further verification of ancient texts is needed to validate this conclusion.

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