The burials, found underneath the cremated remains of an Ice Age
toddler, date to about 11,500 years ago and provide new insights
into mortuary practices of the people who lived in the area of the
Upward Sun River site at the time.
The largely complete skeletons were found in a circular pit with
associated "grave goods" that included four antler rods and two
stone projectile points, all decorated with red ochre, according to
research carried out last year by a team led by University of Alaska
anthropologist Ben Potter.
In a paper published on Monday in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, the team said skeletal and dental analyses
indicate one of the skeletons was of an infant that died shortly
after birth, while the other was of a late-term fetus.
The site represents the youngest-aged late Pleistocene individuals
known in the Americas, it said, as well as the continent's only
known prenatal burial dating from the period.
The pair, both tentatively believed to have been female, were found
buried about 16 inches (40 cm) beneath the cremated remains of a
3-year-old child that was previously excavated by the team during
work at the site in 2010.
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"Two interred infants with associated grave goods and a third
cremated child represent the earliest known human remains from the
North American subarctic, and they provide evidence for novel
mortuary behaviors at the end of the last Ice Age," the authors
wrote.
The team, which included Joel Irish of Liverpool John Moores
University, said the site shares characteristics with other burials
from the same periods, including interment in pits, red ochre, and
grave goods consisting of functional tools, as opposed to ornaments
or trinkets.
The archaeologists believe the stone projectile points were once
attached to the antler rods to make tools or weapons, and could
reflect the importance of hunting implements in the burial ceremony.
But they said they also noted the predominance of fish and small
game remains at the site.
(Reporting by Daniel Wallis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Sandra
Maler)
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