xairhossi
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Protohistoric graveyards of the Swat Valley, Pakistan: new light on funerary practices and absolute chronology
"The protohistoric graveyards of north-western Pakistan were first excavated in the 1960s, but their chronology is still debated, along with their relationship to broader regional issues of ethnic and cultural change. Recent excavation of two graveyards in the Swat Valley has provided new dating evidence and a much better understanding both of grave structure and treatment of the dead. Secondary burial was documented at Udegram, along with the use of perishable containers and other objects as grave goods. The complexity of the funerary practices reveal the prolonged interaction between the living and the dead in protohistoric Swat."
https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...e-chronology/12E80F85D723D017F17D4B5EAB2CD71E
The University of Padua in Italy have also released an academic paper on it, but it's in Italian.
http://www.unipd.it/download/file/fid/51323
Apparently they have also managed to extract ancient DNA samples from the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age and also may publish a paper on them. Would be very interesting for the history of the region, especially the Aryan invasion.
@save_ghenda @Kambojaric @Talwar e Pakistan
- Massimo Vidale (a1) and Roberto Micheli (a2)
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2017.23
- Published online: 04 April 2017
"The protohistoric graveyards of north-western Pakistan were first excavated in the 1960s, but their chronology is still debated, along with their relationship to broader regional issues of ethnic and cultural change. Recent excavation of two graveyards in the Swat Valley has provided new dating evidence and a much better understanding both of grave structure and treatment of the dead. Secondary burial was documented at Udegram, along with the use of perishable containers and other objects as grave goods. The complexity of the funerary practices reveal the prolonged interaction between the living and the dead in protohistoric Swat."
https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...e-chronology/12E80F85D723D017F17D4B5EAB2CD71E
The University of Padua in Italy have also released an academic paper on it, but it's in Italian.
http://www.unipd.it/download/file/fid/51323
Apparently they have also managed to extract ancient DNA samples from the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age and also may publish a paper on them. Would be very interesting for the history of the region, especially the Aryan invasion.
@save_ghenda @Kambojaric @Talwar e Pakistan