Salad

1,200-year-old giant ‘death jar’ in Laos contains generations of human skeletons

Archaeologists excavating an unusual “death jar” in Laos have discovered that it was used to collect the partly decomposed remains of multiple generations of people around 1,200 years ago. And rather than being the deceased’s final burial spot, the jar may represent one step in a complex mortuary process.

The large death jar, called Jar 1, is also the first of its kind on record to contain undisturbed human remains, the excavation team reported in a new study. Thousands of centuries-old death jars have been found in Southeast Asia over the decades, and while researchers suspected that the vessels may have been used for burials, there was no solid evidence for that until now.

Related posts

Live Science Today: Meta and Google fined for causing social media addiction and how dogs were our friends for millennia

sys.admin

Jiawen Galaxy Projector Light review

sys.admin

How Anthropic’s safety-first ethos collided with the Pentagon

sys.admin

Leave a Comment