14,000-yr-old grave flowers unearthed
Archaeologis-ts have unearthed the oldest example of the use of grave flowers in a nearly 14,000-year-old burial pit in a cave in Israel. The ancient burial pit contained impressions from stems and flowers of aromatic plants such as mint and sage, researchers found. The new find “is the oldest example of putting flowers and fresh plants in the grave before burying the dead,” said study co-author Dani Nadel, an archaeologist at the University of Haifa.
The burial pits, the first true gravesites in the world, were excavated nearly a half a century ago from Raqefet Cave in Mount Carmel, Israel. The people who made the tombs were part of a Natufian culture that flourished in the Near East beginning about 15,000 years ago.
The region contains graves for hundreds of skeletons, including a burial of an ancient shaman woman.
Though archaeologists first excavated Raqefet Cave years ago, Nadel and his colleagues did a more thorough excavation starting in 2004. The team found four burial sites, containing a total of 29 skeletons, which contained impressions from plant stems and flowers.
The stems had a square cross-section, a relatively uncommon trait that is found in mint, sage and other aromatic plants from the region. When they looked at the material under a scanning electron microscope, they found tiny phytoliths, or microscopic crystals made by plants.
The team concluded that the flowers were placed in the grave within a primitive plaster before the bodies were placed there.
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