Human cremation in Mexico 3,000 years ago

Mixtec nobles are depicted in codices and other proto-historic documentation taking part in funerary rites involving cremation. The time depth for this practice was unknown, but excavations at the early village site of Tayata, in the southern state of Oaxaca, Mexico, recovered undisturbed cremation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2008-04, Vol.105 (14), p.5315-5320
Hauptverfasser: Duncan, William N, Balkansky, Andrew K, Crawford, Kimberly, Lapham, Heather A, Meissner, Nathan J
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container_issue 14
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container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Duncan, William N
Balkansky, Andrew K
Crawford, Kimberly
Lapham, Heather A
Meissner, Nathan J
description Mixtec nobles are depicted in codices and other proto-historic documentation taking part in funerary rites involving cremation. The time depth for this practice was unknown, but excavations at the early village site of Tayata, in the southern state of Oaxaca, Mexico, recovered undisturbed cremation burials in contexts dating from the eleventh century B.C. These are the earliest examples of a burial practice that in later times was reserved for Mixtec kings and Aztec emperors. This article describes the burial contexts and human remains, linking Formative period archaeology with ethnohistorical descriptions of Mixtec mortuary practices. The use of cremation to mark elevated social status among the Mixtec was established by 3,000 years ago, when hereditary differences in rank were first emerging across Mesoamerica.
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subjects Anthropology
Archaeological surveys
Archaeology
Ashes
Bones
Cremation
Excavations
Figurines
Foot bones
Funeral Rites - history
Funerary rituals
Geological time
History, Ancient
Human remains
Humans
Mexico
Middens
Mortuary Practice - history
Paleoanthropology
Social Class
Social Sciences
title Human cremation in Mexico 3,000 years ago
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