Nataruk

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nataruk an entity of type: Place

Натарук — место археологических раскопок в округе Туркана, Кения, где были найдены останки 27 человек, погибших примерно 10 000 лет назад. Находка считается одним из самых ранних свидетельств межобщинного насилия и военных действий в доисторическое время. rdf:langString
Nataruk in Turkana County, Kenya, is the site of an archaeological investigation which uncovered the 10,000-year-old remains of 27 people. The remains have garnered wide media attention for possible bioarchaeological evidence of interpersonal violence, i.e. prehistoric warfare. The excavation at Nataruk, led by Dr. Marta Mirazón Lahr as part of the IN-AFRICA Project, began in 2012. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Nataruk
rdf:langString Натарук
rdf:langString Nataruk
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rdf:langString The site of Nataruk taken during excavations
rdf:langString Turkana County, Kenya
rdf:langString Location in Kenya
rdf:langString Kenya
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rdf:langString Nataruk in Turkana County, Kenya, is the site of an archaeological investigation which uncovered the 10,000-year-old remains of 27 people. The remains have garnered wide media attention for possible bioarchaeological evidence of interpersonal violence, i.e. prehistoric warfare. According to the Nature article published by Dr. Mirazón Lahr and colleagues, the skeletons present the earliest evidence for intergroup violence among hunting-foraging populations, which they interpret as a "massacre": the remains of adults and six children show signs of a violent end, having been clubbed or stabbed and left to die without burial. Two of the male remains had stone projectile tips lodged in the skull and thorax. However, a 'Brief Communication Arising' published in Nature by Christopher Stojanowski and colleagues calls into question much of the alleged evidence of a "massacre". Their critique centers on two main points. First, these authors suggest that much of the evidence of peri-mortem trauma identified by Mirazón Lahr is equally - if not more - likely to have occurred after deposition; that is, after the skeletons were buried, intentionally or otherwise. Second, Stojanowski disagrees over the interpretation of the site formation processes. Where Mirazón Lahr sees little evidence for intentional burial at the site, Stojanowski argues that the bodies at Nataruk are mostly articulated, spatially organized, non-commingled, and preserve limited variation in body positioning, all of which are inconsistent with skeletons from well-documented massacre sites. It is unclear exactly what happened at the site, but Mirazón Lahr stand by their interpretation that it was a massacre, the result of an attack by another group of hunter-gatherers. They believe it is "the earliest scientifically-dated historical evidence of human conflict." A comparable site, Cemetery 117 at Jebel Sahaba, was excavated in Sudan in the 1960s and is believed to be of a similar age. At Jebel Sahaba, Qadan individuals who had been killed were buried within a cemetery. The excavation at Nataruk, led by Dr. Marta Mirazón Lahr as part of the IN-AFRICA Project, began in 2012.
rdf:langString Натарук — место археологических раскопок в округе Туркана, Кения, где были найдены останки 27 человек, погибших примерно 10 000 лет назад. Находка считается одним из самых ранних свидетельств межобщинного насилия и военных действий в доисторическое время.
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