Posted on 12/29/2006 11:34:38 AM PST by blam
Plastered Syrian Skulls from the Dawn of Civilisation
In the Neolithic period the Levantine Fertile Crescent ushered in one of the most profound cultural revolutions in the history of the Mediterranean basin. This environmentally blessed cradle of civilisation played host to modern humans as they made the crucial transition from hunter-gatherers to sedentary farmers to emerge as proto-urban societies. A conspicuous enigma of the worlds first city dwellers was the most extraordinary ritual practice of plastering human skulls, which is attested at several major Neolithic sites, such as Jericho in the Palestinian Territories, Çatalhöyük in Turkey, and Ain Ghazal in Jordan. To this list may now be added five skulls recently excavated by Danielle Stordeur of the CNRS at Tell Aswad in northern Syria.
Above: Three plastered skulls of 9500 BC surrounding a child burial excavated at Tell Aswad in northern Syria. Photos: Danielle Stordeur, CNRS."
The Syrian skulls are remarkable for their exceptional preservation, and display a bizarre, almost alien primeval quality. They are also the oldest examples discovered. Having been radiocarbon dated to 9500 BC, they are over 2000 years older than the plastered skulls found elsewhere in the Levant, assigned to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period. The skulls were discovered in a pit and were clustered around an infant inhumation. They are plastered smooth with clay painted red, the eyes are depicted closed and underlined with black bitumen, while the mouth appears as a thin slit. The sex of the individuals concerned is yet to be established, but this discovery may perhaps mirror other examples previously unearthed at Tell Aswad and elsewhere, in which the skulls had been removed from the skeletons of both adults and children.
Not surprisingly, the apparently widespread practice of removing, plastering, and painting skulls in the region has prompted a great deal of debate about the significance of this ritual. Professor Ian Hodder, the director of excavations at Çatalhöyük, has suggested to Minerva that The meanings of these plastered skulls vary in different parts of the Middle East in the Neolithic. This new group from Syria is typical of those from the Levant and adjacent areas as the skulls are in groups. They represent collective and generic ancestors. But the example from Çatalhöyük is single and suggests a memory of an individual person. In all cases, the aim may be to reflesh the dead as part of rites of renewal.
Danielle Stordeur relates her finds to a system of clans, social organisation, lineages, and group leaders, and has suggested that there was a clear choice in the small number of individuals selected for this special treatment, and their placement to mark cemeteries, and in the respect given to the skulls by their careful burial. She also thinks it likely that before they were placed into the pits they were exposed for a time before burial as in New Guinea, where this practice is known from ethnography. The treatment of the face and head - the most human part of an individual - shows that people of this period had a conscience which specifically related to this part of the human body.
Dr Mark Merrony
GGG Ping.
In before the drinking posts
In before Helen Thomas pics
What is that, 350 generations ago?
Seems both a long and short time.
However, some modern cultures believe the seat of consciousness to be the heart. So a link between porcelain heads and belief in the home of consciousness ain't necessarily so.
Stuccoed skulls ping!.......
Too bad it's not Assad's shattered skull as a result of a sniper round 2 hours ago.
Very cool bttt. Thank Mr. Blam.
Wrong poster.......
I'd tell you what it is that I hate about senility if I could just remember what it is.
Yup. These trees have been used to date some catastrophic events on earth that were recorded in their tree-rings.
"Earth's oldest living inhabitant "Methuselah" at 4,767 years, has lived more than a millennium longer than any other tree."
There's a cresote bush out west somewhere that is the oldest living thing alive.
"Creosote bush commonly forms clonal colonies, which may be very long-lived; a ring of creosote bushes in the Mojave Desert is believed to be at least 12,000 years old."
"This most recent find was estimated to cover over 2,200 acres (890 hectares) and be at least 2,400 years old, possibly older."
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I'm starting to think more and more that MAYBE we had more of an advanced civilization at some time in the past, and that civilization declined and was almost destroyed by whatever events almost drove the mega fauna to extinction.
I've heard rumors that there are some in the open academic community who are talking that the pyramids themselves might be as much as 10,000 years old.
Dr Robert Schoch, geologist/geophysist, has dated the Sphinx at 9,000 years old. I don't know of anyone reputable who claims that the pyramids are that old.
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