Disarticulation, evisceration and excarnation: Neolithic mortuary practices at Dingsishan, southern China

Antiquity Pub Date : 2024-04-16 DOI:10.15184/aqy.2024.57
Ziqi Ye, Minghui Wang, Jay T. Stock, Fa-jun Li
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Abstract

The diversity of human mortuary practices and treatments in prehistory is widely recognised, but our understanding of the purpose and manner of corpse manipulation in many regions is limited. This article reports on unusual aspects of funerary archaeology at the Neolithic site of Dingsishan, southern China. Anatomical consideration of cutmarks on human bones and the positioning of bodies and body parts within burials suggests that mortuary treatments at this site included strategic and systematic disarticulation, evisceration and excarnation. Rather than signalling social differences, these practices may have resulted from the very practical need to save space.
肢解、内脏剥离和化身:中国南方鼎山新石器时代的停尸习俗
史前人类停尸习俗和处理方式的多样性已得到广泛认可,但我们对许多地区处理尸体的目的和方式的了解却很有限。本文报告了中国南方鼎山新石器时代遗址中不寻常的殡葬考古方面。对人骨上的切痕以及尸体和身体部位在墓葬中的位置进行的解剖学研究表明,该遗址的殡葬处理包括战略性和系统性的肢解、开膛破肚和剥皮。与其说这些做法表明了社会差异,不如说是出于节省空间的实际需要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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