At the end of the Levantine Epipaleolithic, at the beginning of the Natufian culture (14 900-13 700 BP cal.), some hunter-gatherer communities settle down. The formation of the first hamlets testifies to a new organization of the inhabited space that integrates the population of the deceased. The artistic representations and the personal ornaments appear in exceptional quantity and diversity on the scale of the Prehistory of the Levant. In some hamlets, part of the buried population was buried with personal ornaments but these assemblages have rarely been studied and sometimes even never inventoried. However, the personal ornaments discovered in funerary context could deliver important information on the organization of Natufian society and...