The Free Press Journal

Human bones in Punjab well solve 1857 mystery

- OUR BUREAU /

Genetic and chemical studies on human bones recovered from an abandoned well in Punjab have corroborat­ed historical accounts that they are the remains of soldiers from the 26th Native Bengal Infantry regiment who were killed during the 1857 revolt.

The Kolkata-based English daily ‘Telegraph’ reported on Friday the scientists have declared the results of the studies that indicate the bones, discovered by amateur archaeolog­ists in 2014 from a well in Ajnala near Amritsar, belonged to the adult males from Bengal, Bihar, Odisha and eastern Uttar Pradesh.

An account of the 1857 uprising, published in 1858 by Frederick Henry Cooper, the deputy commission­er of the district, had documented the capture, imprisonme­nt and killing of 282 soldiers of the 26th Native Bengal Infantry regiment. Cooper’s book and other historical accounts said the soldiers’ bodies had been dumped in a disused well, but the well’s local remained unknown until April 2014 when amateur archaeolog­ists and curiosity seekers searched various sites and located the heap of skeletal remains. to try and resolve the issue by teaming up with the researcher­s from Hyderabad, Lucknow and Varanasi who specialise­d in genetic and chemical isotope studies.

The skeletal remains included teeth, jaw fragments, skulls, femurs and hand and foot bones. The scientists used 50 bone samples for genetic analysis and 85 for chemical isotope analysis, hoping to gain insight into affinities with current population.

“The DNA analysis tells us about ancestry while isotope analysis tells us about their diet which can in turn shed light on geographic affinity,”

said Kumarasamy Thangaraj, a scientist at Centre for

Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad. He said: “We have helped resolve a 165year-old mystery.” The results were published in the journal Frontiers in Genetics. They show the bones are the remains of people from the Gangetic plains, particular­ly from Bengal, Odisha, Bihar and UP and not those of Punjab locals. “Historical records tell us soldiers from this battalion were posted at Mian Meer in the present-day Pakistan and they were killed by the British officers during the revolt,” Sehrawat said.

 ?? Jagmahende­r Singh Sehrawat, a forensic anthropolo­gist at the Punjab University, Chandigarh, decided ?? This discovery triggered a debate, with some arguing the bones belonged to the 1857 soldiers while some historians suggested they could be the remains of the victims of the 1947 partition murdered on the Indian side of Punjab
Jagmahende­r Singh Sehrawat, a forensic anthropolo­gist at the Punjab University, Chandigarh, decided This discovery triggered a debate, with some arguing the bones belonged to the 1857 soldiers while some historians suggested they could be the remains of the victims of the 1947 partition murdered on the Indian side of Punjab

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