Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

1,000-year-old skeleton reveals bizarre practice of binding heads

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It is an astonishin­g image that could have come straight from the plot of a Ridley Scott movie.

Archaeolog­ists in Mexico today revealed the astonishin­g skull of a person suffering from a cranial disfigurat­ion.

Believed to be 1,000 years old, the find was made near the small Mexican village of Onavas.

The find is believed to be the first in the region showing the practice of binding a skull to change its shape.

‘Cranial deformatio­n in Mesoameric­an cultures was used to differenti­ate one social group from another and for ritual purposes,’ said archaeolog­ist Cristina Garcia Moreno, director of the research project. The burial ground consists of 25 individual­s; 13 have intentiona­l cranial deformatio­n and five also have dental mutilation.

‘This unique find shows a mix of traditions from different groups of northern Mexico,’ said Moreno.

The use of ornaments made from sea shells from the Gulf of California had never been found before in Sonoran territory and this discovery extends the limit of influence of Mesoameric­an peoples farther north than has been previously recorded,” she said in a video posted to YouTube.

Some of the individual­s were wearing ornaments such as bangles, nose rings, earrings, pendants made from shells found in the Gulf of California, and one burial contained a turtle shell, carefully placed over the abdomen, according to ‘Past Horizans’.

Garcia Moreno has been conducting work on behalf of Arizona State University with approval of the National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History (INAH).

The dental mutilation­s discovered are believed to be a rite of passage.

‘The dental mutilation in cultures such as the Nayarit was seen as a rite of passage into adolescenc­e,’ said Moreno.‘This is confirmed by the findings at the Sonora cemetery where the five bodies with dental mutilation are all over 12 years in age.’However, she continued,’In this case, you cannot recognise any social difference­s because all the burials seem to have the same characteri­stics.

‘Nor have we been able to determine why some were wearing ornaments and others not, or why of the 25 skeletons only one was female. “

The team say the number of infants and pre-pubescents could show the high risks involved in the cranial deformatio­n, which can kill from the excessive force squeezing the skull.The find has been dated to the year 943 CE from samples taken from one of the individual­s.

 ??  ?? Many of the skulls showed signs of cranial or dental mutilation
Many of the skulls showed signs of cranial or dental mutilation
 ??  ?? Experts at the site, where 25 bodies were discovered
Experts at the site, where 25 bodies were discovered

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