In the spring of 2004 a joint team from the Mongolian Academy of Sciences and the Smithsonian Institution removed mummified human remains from a subterranean cave in the southern Mongolian Gobi Desert, just kilometers north of the Chinese border. The remains represent approximately ten individuals, adult and juvenile, and include stomach and bowel contents. Tentative analysis indicates that the individuals were killed through strangulation, garroting, and hanging. Radiometric dating on two samples suggests ages between 1300 AD and 1470 AD (2 sigma calibrated), contextualizing them into a period of volatile cultural change and crisis. Currently, the remains have been shipped to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC, and a study by a ...
International audienceThe authors study burials of the medieval period in westernMongolia shortly be...
Most anthropologists agree that Neandertals disappeared ca. 40,000—30,000 years BP* (Larsen, 2008). ...
A skullcap found in the Salkhit Valley northeast Mongolia is, to our knowledge, the only Pleistocene...
This study represents a contextualized analysis of the perimortem trauma and postmortem treatment of...
NoThis study presents the results of an isotopic analysis of nine naturally mummified individuals—th...
From the 19th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Keble College, Oxford, England, April 3-7...
Natural mummification occurs on every continent and in various environments. While the oldest preser...
Introduction: In 2016, a well-preserved mummy was discovered in the cold and dry climate of the Alta...
Notwithstanding the pioneering achievements of studies on arctic mummies in Siberia, there are insuf...
In 1982 a mummified adult female baboon was discovered on a ledge in Ludwig Cave in Namibia. A toe b...
Osteobiography is the compilation of molecular and anthropological analyses to reconstruct the pre-,...
In 1982 a mummified adult female baboon was discovered on a ledge in Ludwig Cave in Namibia. A toe b...
International audienceThe authors study burials of the medieval period in westernMongolia shortly be...
Introduction: For archaeological projects, a systematic study of recovered human remains is essentia...
Notwithstanding the pioneering achievements of studies on arctic mummies in Siberia, there are insuf...
International audienceThe authors study burials of the medieval period in westernMongolia shortly be...
Most anthropologists agree that Neandertals disappeared ca. 40,000—30,000 years BP* (Larsen, 2008). ...
A skullcap found in the Salkhit Valley northeast Mongolia is, to our knowledge, the only Pleistocene...
This study represents a contextualized analysis of the perimortem trauma and postmortem treatment of...
NoThis study presents the results of an isotopic analysis of nine naturally mummified individuals—th...
From the 19th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Keble College, Oxford, England, April 3-7...
Natural mummification occurs on every continent and in various environments. While the oldest preser...
Introduction: In 2016, a well-preserved mummy was discovered in the cold and dry climate of the Alta...
Notwithstanding the pioneering achievements of studies on arctic mummies in Siberia, there are insuf...
In 1982 a mummified adult female baboon was discovered on a ledge in Ludwig Cave in Namibia. A toe b...
Osteobiography is the compilation of molecular and anthropological analyses to reconstruct the pre-,...
In 1982 a mummified adult female baboon was discovered on a ledge in Ludwig Cave in Namibia. A toe b...
International audienceThe authors study burials of the medieval period in westernMongolia shortly be...
Introduction: For archaeological projects, a systematic study of recovered human remains is essentia...
Notwithstanding the pioneering achievements of studies on arctic mummies in Siberia, there are insuf...
International audienceThe authors study burials of the medieval period in westernMongolia shortly be...
Most anthropologists agree that Neandertals disappeared ca. 40,000—30,000 years BP* (Larsen, 2008). ...
A skullcap found in the Salkhit Valley northeast Mongolia is, to our knowledge, the only Pleistocene...