This week we have 3 interesting archaeology news articles. First, spines excavated in the Chincha valley of Peru are threaded on reeds posthumously. Archaeologist speculate this may have been done by the family members of the data after looting by the Spanish occurred. In segment 2 we take a look at a cemetery in the UK with an unusually high number of decapitated bodies. And finally, it turns out that ancient Egyptians used broken pot sherds as a type of notepad that school children used to practice script writing.
Interested in learning about how to use X-Rays and similar technology in archaeology? Check out the linked PaleoImaging course from James Elliot!
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Links
Native Peruvians threaded corpses’ spines on to sticks, study suggests
Scientists found 192 spines threaded on poles in Peru, a macabre practice that may be a response to Europeans pillaging graves
Decapitated skeletons of Roman 'criminals' found during England rail excavation.
Fleet Marsten HS2
Huge Discovery of 18,000 'Notepads' Documents Daily Life in Ancient Egypt
Contact
Chris Webster
chris@archaeologypodcastnetwork.com
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