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According to new research, people were using hallucinogenic drugs in Spain around 3,000 years ago.

Experts claim that hair from a Menorca burial site demonstrates the use of medications by prehistoric human civilizations that were produced from plants and bushes. It is thought to be the earliest direct indication of drug use by humans in Europe.

Researchers discovered that they would have caused delirium and hallucinations. The research, which was published in the journal Scientific Reports, revealed evidence of human activity at the Es Càrritx cave on Menorca’s southwest coast.

More than 200 human tombs can be found in the cave, which is thought to have been used for religious and funerary purposes for roughly 600 years, up until 800 BCE.

The drugs, which had the potential to be highly potent, may have been utilised in rituals performed at the cave, according to researchers. Shamans “who were capable of regulating the side-effects of the plant medications” may have been involved in these.

Three psychotropic compounds were found in the locks’ analysis, which had been reddened during the ancient rites and might have been applied by more than one person.

Researchers also discovered ephedrine, which increases energy and alertness, along with the hallucinogens atropine and scopolamine.

Moreover, jugs with spiral carvings on their lids were discovered in the cave, according to researchers. According to the report, some academics have connected these carvings to a person’s “altered states of consciousness” while using hallucinogens.

Indirect evidence, such as the portrayal of narcotic plants in works of art, had previously been used to support claims of prehistoric drug use in Europe.

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Authorities claim that a guy who is accused of killing a church caretaker and injuring a priest in southern Spain was going to be deported.

The event took place on Wednesday when a man in the city of Algeciras invaded two churches while carrying a machete.

A 25-year-old Moroccan male was quickly taken into custody after being disarmed. The suspect, who is believed to have acted alone, was scheduled to be taken to the Spanish capital of Madrid to face terrorism-related accusations before the High Court.

The suspect, who was in the country illegally, was reportedly scheduled for deportation in June, according to the authorities. He was not under surveillance and had no criminal or terrorism-related convictions in Spain or any of its allies.

However, according to the Gibraltar authorities, he was expelled from the island in 2019 for violating immigration laws.

For migrants crossing the Strait of Gibraltar from Morocco, Algeciras serves as the main transit centre.

Outside the church where Diego Valencia, the verger, was assassinated, hundreds of people observed a moment of silence. Many people sobbed as mourners lighted candles and left flowers in his honour.

The victim, who made it outside the church, was mortally wounded after being attacked again, according to the interior ministry.

Picture Courtesy: Google/images are subject to copyright