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Cave lion figurine made of mammoth tusk found at Denisova Cave


A fragment of a cave lion figurine estimated to be 45,000 years old was unearthed in Siberia’s Denisova Cave by researchers led by Mikhail Shunkov of the Novosibirsk Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography.

Cave lion figurine made of mammoth tusk found at Denisova Cave
Credit: Novosibirsk Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography
The precious small - 42mm long, 8mm thick and 11mm high - figurine of a cave lion (Panthera spelaea, lat) was made by an Upper Palaeolithic artist between 40,000 and 45,000 years ago. It was found inside the 11th layer of the southern gallery of the Denisova Cave.


This is the oldest sculptural zoomorphic image ever found in Siberia and throughout the territory of Northern and Central Asia.

The precise age is yet to be confirmed, but the cautious dating given by Siberian archaeologists means that this might be the oldest animal figurine in the world.


The lion’s head is missing, what we see is its hind legs, groin, back and belly, covered in an ornament of eighteen rows of nothes. There are two extra rows with four notches on the lion’s right side.


‘The figurine depicts an animal with its tummy tucked in, its hind legs bent. It is either galloping, jumping or getting ready to jump. The animal is shown in a typical for big cats position for the moment when they are ready to catch a prey’, said Mikhail Shunkov, head of the Institute’s Stone Age Archaeology Department.

The mammoth ivory for the statuette was delivered from quite a distance away, Russian scientists say. It had to be carried for at least 100 kilometres from the northern footsteps of the Altai Mountains.

Cave lion figurine made of mammoth tusk found at Denisova Cave
Credit: Novosibirsk Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography
After finishing the figurine, the cave artist used red ochre to paint it.

So far traces of it were found mostly around the stomach area - which even led to an idea that it could be symbolising a bleeding wound - but researcher Alexander Fedorchenko believes that most likely the whole animal was painted red.

Remains of ocher were found only in the southern gallery of the Denisova cave.

Authors: Anna Liesowska & Svetlana Skarbo | Source: The Siberian Times [November 20, 2019]

Remains of 2,000-year-old 'barbarian woman' with Roman jewellery found in Russia


The remains of an ancient 'barbarian woman' thought to be almost 2,000 years old have been found bedecked in fine jewellery from the Roman Empire.

Remains of 2,000-year-old 'barbarian woman' with Roman jewellery found in Russia
Zayukovo burial site excavated [Credit: Joint North Caucasian Archaeological
Expedition of the State Historical Museum, KBSU & IA RAS]
She was found in Russia and is thought to have been of a 'high-status' within her community - possibly the wife, sister or mother of a prominent warrior or chieftain.


Her remains, found in a tomb in the mountainous Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, have surprised archaeologists, in part due to the fact the jewelry was of Roman origin.

The ancient woman is probably from the Alans warrior people who made incursions into the Caucasus in the first and second centuries AD. Archaeologists say she was buried alongside a warrior and two other men

Remains of 2,000-year-old 'barbarian woman' with Roman jewellery found in Russia
Twisted glass ring [Credit: Joint North Caucasian Archaeological Expedition
of the State Historical Museum, KBSU & IA RAS]
"She had two rings on her fingers manufactured with the use of quite a complex technology," said archaeologist Anna Kadieva, head of an expedition at Zayukovo-2 burial site.

Ms Kadieva said the fact the jewellery was Roman-made is "beyond any doubt".

She added: "It is quite expensive for the time, and priceless for the barbarian world because there was no glass production in the North Caucasus back then."

Remains of 2,000-year-old 'barbarian woman' with Roman jewellery found in Russia
Amethyst medallion in gold setting [Credit: Joint North Caucasian Archaeological
Expedition of the State Historical Museum, KBSU & IA RAS]
The beads on her shoes were made of glass but also contained an orange-colored mineral called carnelian that is part of the Quartz family.


She also wore two rings on her fingers manufactured with the use of quite a complex technology. Each of them was cast from transparent white glass with golden fibers from the same material, with a dark glass installation in the middle, as seen in this image

The woman was also discovered wearing a bright violet amethyst medallion. The team say this would have been "priceless" for the region as they had no glass blowing technology at the time

Remains of 2,000-year-old 'barbarian woman' with Roman jewellery found in Russia
Roman beads found in Alan woman's grave [Credit: Joint North Caucasian Archaeological
Expedition of the State Historical Museum, KBSU & IA RAS]
"This is a high class gem worthy of its gold casing," said the archaeologist from the State Historical Museum of Russia.

The woman was possibly the wife of a renowned warrior or tribal chief. The team are examining her remains and others at the Zayukovo-2 burial site in the Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria


She had been buried with a warrior and two other males. Archaeologists are not sure how they died but found they had at a similar time

Remains of 2,000-year-old 'barbarian woman' with Roman jewellery found in Russia
Excavation of the tomb [Credit: Joint North Caucasian Archaeological
Expedition of the State Historical Museum, KBSU & IA RAS]
"We came to the conclusion that wealthy warriors from North Caucasus presented expensive jewellery to their loved ones," Ms Kadieva said.

"The woman most likely was a close relative of the warriors - mother, wife, or sister - because the catacomb is a family burial. It is not clear how they died, but given the integrity of the skeletons, the time between their deaths was short," she said.

Further studies are being made into the finds.

Author: Will Stewart | Source: Daily Mail [November 10, 2019]

The earliest well-preserved tetrapod may never have left the water


Superbly preserved fossils from Russia, excavated with support of a grant from the National Geographic Society and described today by an international team in the leading scientific journal Nature, cast new and surprising light on one of the earliest tetrapods - the group of animals that made the evolutionary transition from water to land and ultimately became the ancestors not just of amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals, but of ourselves.

The earliest well-preserved tetrapod may never have left the water
The Sosnogorsk lagoon just before a deadly storm [Credit: Mikhail Shekhanov/
Ukhta Local Museum]
The first tetrapods evolved from fishes during the Devonian period, which ended about 360 million years ago. For many decades, our idea of what Devonian tetrapods were like have been based on just a few genera, chiefly Ichthyostega and Acanthostega, which are known from near-complete skeletons. Most other Devonian tetrapods are known only from a few scraps of jaws or limb bones: enough to show that they existed, but not really enough to tell us anything useful.


Furthermore, Ichthyostega and Acanthostega lived at the very end of the Devonian. Some of the fragmentary tetrapods are a lot older, up to 373 million years old, and the oldest fossil tetrapod footprints date back a whopping 390 million years. So Devonian tetrapods have a long early history about which, until now, we have known very little. This is a frustrating picture, considering that we are dealing with one of the most important events in the history of the backboned animals.

The new Russian tetrapod, Parmastega aelidae, changes all this. At 372 million years old, its fossils are only marginally younger than the oldest fragmentary tetrapod bones. They come from the Sosnogorsk Formation, a limestone formed in a tropical coastal lagoon, which is now exposed on the banks of the Izhma River near the city of Ukhta in the Komi Republic of European Russia.

The earliest well-preserved tetrapod may never have left the water
Tetrapod dentary in a rock matrix.Superbly preserved fossils from Russia, excavated with support of a grant from the
National Geographic Society and described today by an international team in the leading scientific journal Nature,
cast new and surprising light on one of the earliest tetrapods -- the group of animals that made the evolutionary
 transition from water to land and ultimately became the ancestors not just of amphibians, reptiles,
birds and mammals, but of ourselves [Credit: Pavel Beznosov]
But these are no mere fragments: when the limestone is dissolved with acetic acid, out come perfectly preserved bones from the head and shoulder girdle - more than 100 so far - which can be pieced together into a three-dimensional reconstruction of the animal, by far the earliest for any tetrapod. Large and small individuals are found, the biggest with a head length of about 27 cm. Fish-like characteristics in some bones indicate that this is not only the earliest but also the most primitive of the well-preserved Devonian tetrapods.


And what a strange creature it is! Like other Devonian tetrapods, Parmastega is vaguely crocodile-like in shape, but its eyes are raised above the top of the head, and the curve of its snout and lower jaw create a disconcerting 'grin' that reveals its formidable teeth. A clue to its lifestyle is provided by the lateral line canals, sensory organs for detecting vibrations in the water, which Parmastega inherited from its fish ancestors.

These canals are well-developed on the lower jaw, the snout and the sides of the face, but they die out on top of the head behind the eyes. This probably means that it spent a lot of time hanging around at the surface of the water, with the top of the head just awash and the eyes protruding into the air. But why?

The earliest well-preserved tetrapod may never have left the water
The right bank of the Izhma River, a type locality of the new Devonian tetrapod Parmastega aelidae
[Credit: Pavel Beznosov]
Crocodiles do this today, because they are keeping an eye out for land animals that they might want to catch. We don't know very much about the land that surrounded Parmastega's lagoon, but there may have been large arthropods such as millipedes or 'sea scorpions' to catch at the water's edge. The slender, elastic lower jaw certainly looks well-suited to scooping prey off the ground, its needle-like teeth contrasting with the robust fangs of the upper jaw that would have been driven into the prey by the body weight of Parmastega.

However, the fossil material springs one final surprise: the shoulder girdle was made partly from cartilage, which is softer than bone, and the vertebral column and limbs may have been entirely cartilaginous as they are not preserved. This strongly suggests that Parmastega, with its crocodile-like head and protruding eyes, never really left the water.

Did it creep up on prey at the water's edge and surge onto the shore to seize it in its jaws, only to then slide back into the supporting embrace of the water? We don't know. Far from presenting a progressive cavalcade of ever more land-adapted animals, the origin of tetrapods is looking more and more like a tangled bush of ecological experimentation.

Source: Uppsala University [October 23, 2019]

Trove of silver coins found in ancient Greek city of Phanagoria


Phanagoria is one of the largest ancient Greek cities located on the northern coast of the Black Sea. Its ancient settlement is located on the Taman Peninsula, on the shore of the bay that opened towards the Cimmerian Bosporus (Kerch Strait). In 2014, the State Historical and Archaeological Museum-Reserve was established on the site of the ancient city and its necropolis, where the expedition of the Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences carries out full-scale complex archaeological research.

Trove of silver coins found in ancient Greek city of Phanagoria
Credit: Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Some time ago, during the excavations of the late archaic layer on the acropolis of Phanagoria, the rarest find was made - a treasure of the oldest Bosporan silver coins in an Ionian jug. The uniqueness of the discovery lies not only in the fact that it is the sole such finding in the Black Sea region, but also in the fact that this set of coins made it possible to finally and quite accurately establish the date of minting of the oldest coins in what is today Russian territory.


The jug, which contained 162 silver coins, was hidden in the wall of the house where the goldsmith probably lived. It is apparent that a man of this profession could accumulate a significant fortune. The house of the goldsmith was destroyed in a fire that occurred in the early 5th century BC. At the same time, the destruction in this area of the city was quite widespread: other residential houses and public buildings, as well as city defensive structures built of adobe bricks in the third quarter of the 6th century BC were destroyed at the same time.

The exact date of the disaster was established by two criteria. The first was the completely unexpected discovery on the ruins of the city defensive walls of a marble slab with an inscription written in Persian cuneiform script. It was made by order of the Persian king Xerxes, son of Darius I. Although the fragmentary text cannot be read in a meaningful way, the very fact of finding such a document is of exceptional historical importance given almost all the inscriptions of the Persian kings were found in Iran.

Trove of silver coins found in ancient Greek city of Phanagoria
Credit: Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences
It is known that Xerxes, like his father, devoted his life to the conquests of various territories in order to expand his vast empire from Afghanistan to Egypt. But the main focus of his aggressive policy was on the subordination of Hellas and which ended by 479 BC with the defeat of the Persians.

The second important factor in the analysis of the Phanagoria treasure is contained in the report of Diodorus of Sicily (XII.31.1), which states that after 480/79 BC the Cimmerian Bosporus was ruled by the Archaeanactids, a Greek dynasty of the Kingdom of Bosporus.


The combination of these and some other facts leads to the conclusion that in 480 BC Phanagoria (along with other Black Sea Greek cities) was captured by the Persians, who, in all likelihood, established the Archeanactid regime.

The number of markings found on the coins in the treasure suggests that they were produced within about a quarter of a century, which would date them to the turn of the 6th and 5th centuries BC. On the obverse of the coins is depicted a lion's head, while the reverse is stamped with a four-part incuse square.

The reason for the appearance of coins at such an early time on the northern edge of the ancient world is the subject of heated debate between numismatics and scholars in the field of ancient Greek economics. Nevertheless, it is obvious that about half a century after the coins were struck, the ancient Greek cities in the Bosporus (modern Kerch and Taman Peninsulas) attained a high level of development.

Source: Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences [trsl. TANN, September 13, 2019]

Iron Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia


An extraordinary 2,137-year-old belt buckle been dug from a grave of a young woman who lived before the birth of Christ.

Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
AT1/29 burial with jet belt buckle [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
The ancient fashionista, nicknamed Natasha by archaeologists, was found with a black rectangular accessory worn as a belt buckle.


Her grave was discovered during the draining of a vast man-made reservoir in the mountainous Republic of Tuva, Siberia, which stretches across 240 square miles.

The ancient necropolis is described as 'The Russian Atlantis' for it is usually submerged under 56ft of water before being drained for a few weeks every year.

Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Detail of jet buckle with semiprecious stone inlay [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Chinese wuzhu coin that adorned the belt of the woman in AT1/29 [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
The find was made in 2016 at the Ala-Tey necropolis in the Sayan Sea [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
The giant reservoir known as the Ala-Tey necropolis in the so-called Sayan Sea is upstream of the Sayano-Shushenskaya Dam, Russia's biggest power plant. The region is also a favourite vacation spot for Vladimir Putin.


The mobile lookalike is made of black gemstone jet, a type of lignite, with inlays of semi-precious stones. It measures 7 inches by 3.5 inches and is inlaid with decorations of turquoise, carnelian and mother-of-pearl.

Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Burial AT1-86 with jet decorated belt [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Jet buckle from AT1-86 engraved with mountain goats [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Openwork bronze belt buckle horses in combat from grave AT1/42 [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Bronze belt buckle depicting horses in combat from grave AT1/42 [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
The so-called 'Sleeping beauty' in silk clothes found at the site [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Archaeologist Dr Pavel Leus said: 'Natasha's' burial with a Hunnu-era (Xiongnu) iPhone remains one of the most interesting at this burial site.' 


'Hers was the only belt decorated with Chinese wuzhu coins which helped us to date it,' said the academic. 

Graves of prehistoric civilisations dating from the Bronze Age to the time of Genghis Khan are located at the reservoir.

Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Ala-Tay mountain in early June after the run-off [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Bronze Age grave of Xiongnu woman wearing huge black gemstone belt buckle found in Siberia
Ala-Tay mountain at the end of June after the reservoir is refilled [Credit: Institute for the History
of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences]
Previous findings include two partly-mummified prehistoric fashionistas buried with the tools of their trade.


One was called 'Sleeping Beauty' because she was dressed in silk for the afterlife and was at first believed to be a priestess. However the woman is now thought to have been a leather designer. The second was a weaver laid to rest with her wooden spindle packed inside a sewing bag.

A total of 110 burials appeared on an island in the reservoir at Ala-Tey site.


Leader of the expedition Dr Marina Kilunovskaya from the St Petersburg Institute of Material History Culture described the Ala-Tey site as 'a scientific sensation'.

Dr Kilunovskaya added: 'We are incredibly lucky to have found these burials of rich Hun nomads that were not disturbed by [ancient] grave robbers.'

Another Atlantis site called Terezin has at least 32 graves and is closer to the shore.

Scientists admit they are in a race against time to examine the sites and save priceless treasures from damage by water.

Author: Will Stewart | Source: Daily Mail Online [September 09, 2019]

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia


A series of 'death pits' containing 300 bodies have been discovered in Russia. The grisly site, which was found in the city of Yaroslavl, northeast of Moscow, likely dates back to the Mongol invasion of Europe in 1238. During this time, Genghis Khan's grandson, Batu Khan, decimated entire communities in his brutal - and bloodthirsty - bid for power.

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
A total of 300 skeletons have been unearthed in the city of Yaroslavl, northeast of Moscow
[Credit: Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Science]
Now, thanks to scientific advances, DNA evidence has revealed that three of the victims were related and killed together: a grandmother, a mother and a grandson.


Experts from Russia's Institute of Archaeology, plus the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, have now analysed the remains to paint a clearer picture of the victims, whose bodies were dumped in one of nine mass graves.

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
The site, found in the city of Yaroslavl, northeast of Moscow, likely dates back to 1238[Credit: Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Science]
The matriarch was at least 55 years-old, her daughter was around 30 to 40 years-old and the grandson was no more than 20.  Although DNA confirms they were blood relatives, it was somewhat obvious to anthropologists - they all shared certain skull features, and all of their skeletons showed signs of spina bifida, a hereditary birth defect that produces an underdeveloped spinal cord.


Further evidence of the murdered family's wealth was detected in their teeth. Their remains showed more advanced tooth decay than in the other townsfolk, hinting that the family's diet included regular helpings of honey and sugar — a sign of elevated status. Genetic analysis also pinpointed a possible fourth family member, a maternal relative, buried nearby, the scientists said.

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
These human skulls display clear evidence of brute force, which was most likely the result
of the Mongolians invading their communities 
[Credit: Institute of Archaeology,
Russian Academy of Science]
The life stages of preserved maggots in the remains indicated that the flies laid their eggs on the corpses in warm weather - which suggests that the bodies were decomposing in the open for months before being buried.


"These people were killed, and their bodies remained lying in the snow for a fairly long time," said Asya Engovatova, head of excavations at the Yaroslavl site and deputy director of the Institute of Archaeology at the Russian Academy of Sciences.

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
The grave was uncovered near a burned-down homestead beneath a demolished cathedral[Credit: Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Science]
"In April or May, flies started to multiply on the remains, and in late May or early June, they were buried in a pit on the homestead, which is where they probably had lived," Engovatova said.


The data was presented at at the Alekseyev Readings conference in Moscow. Though scholars have argued that Khan's Golden Horde peacefully acquired territory in Russia, the gruesome evidence at Yaroslavl proves otherwise, the scientists said.

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
Experts from Russia's Institute of Archaeology have now analysed the remains to paint a clearer
 picture of the victims, whose bodies were dumped in one of nine mass graves 
[Credit: Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Science]
Signs of brutality were seen in the hundreds of hastily-buried bodies, their bones punctured, broken and burned. By the time the Mongol invaders were done with Yaroslavl and the Russian town had fallen, it was truly a 'city drowned in blood,' the horrific fate of its residents later woven into legend, the team added.

13th century mass graves filled with victims of Mongol invaders found in Russia
Nine burial pits linked to the invasion have been found in the area so far[Credit: Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Science]
"Batu Khan's conquest was the greatest national tragedy, surpassing any other event in cruelty and destruction," Engovatova said. "It is not by chance that it is among the few such events that made its way into the Russian folklore."

See also: Genes reveal kinship between three victims of Mongol army in 1238 massacre

Author: Peter LLoyd | Source: Daily Mail [September 07, 2019]

Genes reveal kinship between three victims of Mongol army in 1238 massacre


Researchers from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and the Russian Academy of Sciences Institute of Archaeology have used DNA testing to prove close genetic kinship between three individuals buried in a mass grave following the capture of the Russian city Yaroslavl by Batu Khan's Mongol army in 1238. This confirms the hypothesis made by archaeologists and anthropologists after studying the remains of 15 persons interred on a historic estate.

Genes reveal kinship between three victims of Mongol army in 1238 massacre
Skulls from mass grave in Yaroslavl, Russia, showing traces of violence
[Credit: Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Sciences]
"In addition to recreating the overall picture of the fall of the city in 1238, we now see the tragedy of one family," said Asya Engovatova, deputy director of the Institute of Archaeology, RAS, and head of excavations on the Yaroslavl site. "DNA analysis has shown that there were remains of genetically related individuals representing three generations. Anthropological data suggest these were a grandmother aged 55 or older, her daughter aged 30 to 40 and grandson, a young man of about 20. A fourth member of the family related through the female line was buried in the neighbouring mass grave."

"Importantly, these family relations were initially postulated by archaeologists and anthropologists, and then confirmed by genetic data," the scientist added. "This makes our research more evidential and allows us to discuss the 13th-century events and way of life with more certainty."

The researchers announced their discovery at the eighth Alekseyev Readings, an international conference held Aug. 26-28 at the Anuchin Research Institute and Museum of Anthropology in Moscow.


Historical records name Yaroslavl among other cities devastated by Batu Khan's army during his military campaign against the Grand Duchy of Vladimir in the early 13th century. However, the true scope of the tragedy only became clear in 2005, when salvage excavations began on the site of the city's Assumption Cathedral, built in the early 13th century, demolished in 1937, and restored between 2004-2010. Over just five years, nine mass graves and over 300 buried individuals who had died a violent death were found, more than in the other ravaged cities. The findings of prior research then enabled a detailed reconstruction of the events: It was proved that the unearthed victims died during the capture of Yaroslavl by Batu Khan's forces in February 1238.

"Batu Khan's conquest was the greatest national tragedy, surpassing any other event in cruelty and destruction. It is not by chance that it is among the few such events that made its way into the Russian folklore," Engovatova said. "What we now know about those raids suggests that chronicle descriptions of 'a city drowned in blood' were not merely a figure of speech."

"The first third of the 13th century saw the conquest of China, Central Asia, the Caucasus, Volga Bulgaria, and the part of the East European Plain where Yaroslavl lies," the researcher went on. "Some publications of the past 10-15 years took the viewpoint that the inclusion of Rus [the present-day Russia] into the Golden Horde was almost peaceful and voluntary, with practically no major atrocities committed. But it is now obvious this was not really the case."

One of the mass graves—now identified as No. 76—was located at the center of the inner city citadel. There, corpses were buried in a shallow pit on a rich homestead burned during the assault on the city. The main wooden house and the outbuildings on the estate contained many artifacts, pointing to the high status of the owners.

Genes reveal kinship between three victims of Mongol army in 1238 massacre
Left: blowfly larvae found in the mass grave. Right: graphic reconstruction of the individual from burial No. 79
[Credit: Sergey Nikitin/Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Sciences]
That grave in particular attracted the researchers' attention, because the pit for it was dug on purpose, while the other mass graves nearby were located in the basements of houses and burned-down outbuildings. That kind of burial contradicted the norms of the day and did not observe the ritual. The 15 men, women, and children in the pit were unearthed in different poses, and some of the corpses had badly decomposed by the time they were interred. This strongly suggests that the bodies were simply disposed of in that way, for sanitary reasons.

Many of the corpses bore marks of a violent death on the bones—traces of unhealed piercing and cutting wounds. Some of the bones were burnt, pointing to the fire that ravaged the city.

Fly larvae were found in the remains, indicating advanced stages of decomposition and allowing the researchers to date the burial. By identifying the blowfly species, entomologists knew at what average daily temperature their larvae would reach the observed stage of development. That temperature corresponded to late May or early June conditions.

"The data on the time they were buried are very precise and support the anthropologists' hypothesis that the corpses had partly decomposed. These people were killed, and their bodies remained lying in the snow for a fairly long time. In April or May, flies started to multiply on the remains, and in late May or early June they were buried in a pit on the homestead, which is where they probably had lived," Engovatova said.


Anthropologists studying the remains were the first to hypothesize kinship between some of the buried individuals. This was suggested by epigenetic feature similarities: the presence of a birth defect known as spina bifida, a persistent metopic suture, an expressed osteoma on the cranial vault, and intercondylar fossa characteristics.

The anthropology group also inferred possible intermarriages within the family from certain abnormalities that are characteristic of children born from such marriages. Apart from that, the members of this family suffered from tooth decay more than the other buried individuals. Since it predominantly develops in connection with a diet rich in sugars and carbohydrates, the family apparently consumed more sugar and honey than their average contemporaries.

Kharis Mustafin and Irina Alborova led the research team from MIPT's Historical Genetics, Radiocarbon Analysis and Applied Physics Lab, which undertook a complex molecular and genetic study of the remains of eight buried individuals. The team cleaned the archaeological samples of bones and teeth, pulverized them, and recovered the ancient DNA. Its analysis revealed the same mitochondrial DNA mutations in three individuals, while studying autosomal DNA markers supplied the data on how closely the persons were related. In addition, one mitochondrial DNA line pointed to a fourth possible maternal relative, buried in a neighboring grave.

"Genetic studies have confirmed the relationship between three of them. They were probably members of the same wealthy, high-ranking family," Engovatova said. "The location of the estate at the center of the citadel confirms this, and so do the archaeological finds made on the estate. Even a hanging seal was found. This might well be the very family that owned the rich homestead excavated 3 meters from the grave."

Source: Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology [September 02, 2019]

Remains of wealthy warrior buried next to wife and children unearthed in Phanagoria


Archaeologists have unearthed a well-preserved necropolis where a wealthy Greek warrior and his family were buried.

Remains of wealthy warrior buried next to wife and children unearthed in Phanagoria
Credit: Fanagoria Press Service
The crypt containing a man, his wife and their three children was found dated back to the 5th century AD in Phanagoria, Krasnodar Krai, Russia.

The expedition team, led by experts from the Institute of Archaeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said the family may have died from the plague or during an attack by Nomadic tribes.


Given the depth of the burial, which was more than five metres deep, it is suggested the warrior and his family held a high status during the time.

Aleksei Voroshilov, head of the Necropolis division at the Phanagoria archaeological dig, said: "Judging by what we have found here the man was served the city’s army. He was a horseman, because we found riding stirrups and spurs too. There is also a leather harness attached to a belt which was used to carry a sword. The buckles on the harness are really worn-out which means this warrior has seen a lot of fighting. He was unsheathing and sheathing his sword again and again."

Remains of wealthy warrior buried next to wife and children unearthed in Phanagoria
Remains of wealthy warrior buried next to wife and children unearthed in Phanagoria
Remains of wealthy warrior buried next to wife and children unearthed in Phanagoria
Credit: Fanagoria Press Service
Several other valuable artifacts have been found this summer in excavations both above ground in ancient Phanagoria and underwater in the flooded parts of the ancient city.

Head of Phanagoria open-air museum Vladimir Kuznetsov said: "This year we have discovered very accurate and strong evidence [that Christianity was founded in Phanagoria in the fifth century], which is a marble tabletop, which could be used as an altar in a church. We have discovered a marble baptistery for infants or probably for toddlers as well. It is not very big, nevertheless it is massive and made from marble."

The archaeological finds are not only of interest to Russian experts but to the wider world as they are unique among other nation’s discoveries.


Vladimir said: "One of our underwater expeditions discovered a ship some time ago, which was sunk following the uprising in Phanagoria against Mithridates VI of Pontus which occured exactly in 62 BC. This ship is one of the most ancient ones ever found in the world."


Around 250 people took part in this year’s archaeological dig at Phanagoria. Among them were experts from France and Bulgaria as well as student volunteers.

Author: Tiffany Lo | Source: Mirror [August 28, 2019]

Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia


In July and August, the North-Western archaeological expedition, with the support of the student archaeological group 'Chronos', conducted both surface and underwater surveys to locate possible Stone Age settlements in the valley of the Serteika River in the north of the Smolensk region.

Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Credit: Fontanka
During the course of the research, archaeologists discovered the remains of the wooden pile house of the fifth millennium BC buried in the river's mud and numerous architectural details were recorded.


Oars and fragments of oars, wooden utensils, bone and flint tools, as well as numerous pottery fragments were found in and around the house. The most striking of these is a cup with depicting a snake.

Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Add caption
Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Add caption
Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Credit: Fontanka


Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Add caption
Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Add caption
Neolithic pile house discovered in North-Western Russia
Credit: Fontanka


"Among the finds made during the excavations of the pile house, a special place is occupied by amber ornaments, which were made by craftsmen in the southeastern Baltic region and which reached the territory of today's Smolensk region, probably as a result of trade", explains Andrey Mazurkevich, the expedition chief, and senior researcher of the Department of Archaeology of Eastern Europe and Siberia of the State Hermitage Museum.

A settlement believed to date to the third millennium BC was also identified along the banks of the river.

Source: Fontanka [trsl. TANN, August 17, 2019]

Gene transcripts from ancient wolf analyzed after 14,000 years in permafrost


RNA - the short-lived transcripts of genes - from the "Tumat puppy", a wolf of the Pleistocene era has been isolated, and its sequence analyzed in a new study by Oliver Smith of the University of Copenhagen and colleagues publishing in the open-access journal PLOS Biology. The results establish the possibility of examining a range of RNA transcripts from ancient organisms, a possibility previously thought to be extremely unlikely because of the short lifespan of RNA.

Gene transcripts from ancient wolf analyzed after 14,000 years in permafrost
The Tumat puppy was found on the banks of a river in the Sakha Republic, Russia
[Credit: The Siberian Times]
DNA, which encodes the "hard copy" of genes, is known to survive for thousands of years under favourable conditions. But RNA -- the short-lived working copy of a gene, which is transcribed from DNA in the cell and forms the instructions for making proteins -- is rapidly broken down in living tissue by a suite of recycling enzymes. That instability typically continues after death, and because of that, researchers have generally assumed that the likelihood of finding intact an ancient cell's complement of RNA -- its transcriptome -- was vanishingly small. But there have been a few exceptions, mostly in plants, which led the authors to ask whether there might be ancient animal transcriptomes well-preserved enough to be sequenced.


They isolated and analyzed RNA from liver tissue of a 14,300-year-old canid, possibly a wolf or partially domesticated wolf-like creature, that had been preserved in Siberian permafrost until its discovery, as well as tissue from two 19th- and 20th-century wolves for comparison. Using a variety of transcriptomic techniques and quality control measures, the team showed that the RNA sequenced from the Pleistocene-era canid was truly representative of the animal's RNA, with many liver-specific transcripts that matched more modern samples from both wolves and dogs.

Gene transcripts from ancient wolf analyzed after 14,000 years in permafrost
Fig 1. Regressions of ancient liver and historical skin samples, Method 1: Relationships between 95th percentile of
expressed genes in each control tissue sample (x-axis) and each ancient sample or control samples from other tissues
 (y-axis). Black points in graphs comparing ancient samples are the relationships between the control tissue and
the equivalent ancient tissue. Red points overlaid show the relationship between the control tissue and other ancient
 tissues specified in the graph subtitle. Yellow lines are least squares linear regression fit for black points. Green lines
are least squares linear regression fit for red points. Filled lines indicate a significant linear regression. Dashed
 lines indicate a nonsignificant linear regression. (A) BGISEQ-500 data, de-duplicated; (B) HiSeq-2500 data,
de-duplicated; (C) BGISEQ-500 data, duplicates retained; (D) HiSeq-2500 data, duplicates retained.
The underlying data for this figure are derived from Varistran output, summaries of which can
be found in S2 Data and S3 Data [Credit: Smith et al. 2019]
The Siberian canid's transcriptome is the oldest RNA sequenced by far, surpassing the next oldest transcriptome by at least 13,000 years. The authors note that unlike paleo-genomics, paleo-transcriptomics is unlikely to become routine, because even in the best conditions, RNA is not as well preserved as DNA.

Nonetheless, there are likely to be a large number of other naturally frozen specimens for which deciphering the transcriptome is possible, opening up for researchers not just the genes of ancient organisms, but the flux of cellular activity encoded by the transcriptome.


"Ancient DNA researchers have previously been reluctant to attempt to sequence ancient RNA because it is generally more unstable than DNA, and more prone to enzymatic degradation," said Dr Smith. "However, following our recent successes in sequencing ancient RNA from plant material, we speculated that a well-preserved animal specimen, frozen in the permafrost, just might retain enough material to sequence. To our delight, we found that not only did we find RNA from various tissues, but in some case the signal was so strong that we could distinguish between tissues in a way that makes biological sense.

"Knowing that RNA acts as an intermediary between DNA and proteins, both of which are more stable, it might be tempting to ask, 'so what?'. But we think the future of ancient RNA has great potential. For example, many of the most clinically relevant viruses around today have RNA genomes, and the RNA stage is often crucial to understanding the intricacies and complexities of gene regulation. This might have repercussions when discussing the environmental stresses and strains that drive evolution."

Source: Public Library of Science [July 30, 2019]