Post-mortem manipulation of human bodies, including the commingling of multiple individuals, is attested throughout the past. More rarely, the bones of different individuals are assembled to create a single 'individual' for burial. Rarer still are composite individuals with skeletal elements separated by hundreds or even thousands of years. Here, the authors report an isolated inhumation within a Gallo-Roman-period cremation cemetery at Pommerœul, Belgium. Assumed to be Roman, radiocarbon determinations show the burial is Late Neolithic - with a Roman-period cranium. Bioarchaeological analyses also reveal the inclusion of multiple Neolithic individuals of various ages and dates. The burial is explained as a composite Neolithic burial that was reworked 2500 years later with the addition of a new cranium and grave goods.
Assembling ancestors: The manipulation of Neolithic and Gallo-Roman skeletal remains at Pommerœul, Belgium / Veselka, B.; Reich, D.; Capuzzo, G.; Olalde, I.; Callan, K.; Zalzala, F.; Altena, E.; Goffette, Q.; Ringbauer, H.; Van Der Velde, H.; Polet, C.; Toussaint, M.; Snoeck, C.; Cattelain, L.. - In: ANTIQUITY. - ISSN 0003-598X. - 98:402(2024), pp. 1576-1591. [10.15184/aqy.2024.158]
Assembling ancestors: The manipulation of Neolithic and Gallo-Roman skeletal remains at Pommerœul, Belgium
Capuzzo G.;
2024-01-01
Abstract
Post-mortem manipulation of human bodies, including the commingling of multiple individuals, is attested throughout the past. More rarely, the bones of different individuals are assembled to create a single 'individual' for burial. Rarer still are composite individuals with skeletal elements separated by hundreds or even thousands of years. Here, the authors report an isolated inhumation within a Gallo-Roman-period cremation cemetery at Pommerœul, Belgium. Assumed to be Roman, radiocarbon determinations show the burial is Late Neolithic - with a Roman-period cranium. Bioarchaeological analyses also reveal the inclusion of multiple Neolithic individuals of various ages and dates. The burial is explained as a composite Neolithic burial that was reworked 2500 years later with the addition of a new cranium and grave goods.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione



