ANU Archaeologists have discovered 15 new sites in Laos containing more than one hundred 1000-year-old massive stone jars possibly used for the dead.
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Jar in Xiengkhouang Province, Laos [Credit: ANU] |
The new finds show the distribution of the jars was more widespread than previously thought and could unlock the secrets surrounding their origin.
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Sandstone megalithic jars in Xiengkhouang Province, Laos [Credit: ANU] |
"These new sites have really only been visited by the occasional tiger hunter. Now we've rediscovered them, we're hoping to build a clear picture about this culture and how it disposed of its dead," said Mr Skopal.
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Megalithic jars in forest [Credit: ANU] |
"It's apparent the jars, some weighing several tonnes, were carved in quarries, and somehow transported, often several kilometres to their present locations," Dr O'Reilly.
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Disc decorated with concentric rings [Credit: ANU] |
This year's excavations revealed beautifully carved discs which are most likely burial markers placed around the jars. Curiously, the decorated side of each disc has been buried face down.
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Disc carved with animal imagery [Credit: ANU] |
"Decorative carving is relatively rare at the jar sites and we don't know why some discs have animal imagery and others have geometric designs," Dr O'Reilly said.
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Excavation site [Credit: ANU] |
"Curiously we also found many miniature jars, which look just like the giant jars themselves but made of clay, so we'd love to know why these people represented the same jars in which they placed their dead, in miniature to be buried with their dead," Dr O'Reilly said.
"We've seen similar megalithic jars in Assam in India and in Sulawesi in Indonesia so we'd like to investigate possible connections in prehistory between these disparate regions."
Source: Australian National University [May 16, 2019]
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