McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Darwin College, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 Jun 6;19(6):e0304058. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304058. eCollection 2024.
The wide diversity of Neolithic funerary practices is increasingly recognised. In Southeast Italy, recent studies have drawn attention to the co-existence of multiple ways of treating the dead within single sites and across the region. In this study, we address how such diverse deathways form a regional framework of ritual practice through histotaphonomic analysis of bone bioerosion. Samples were obtained from articulated, semi-articulated and disarticulated remains from four sites in Apulia which each presented different modes of treatment and disposal of the dead. Bone thin sections were analysed by light microscopy to characterise microstructural preservation through features including bacterial bioerosion, staining, inclusions, and Wedl tunnelling. We investigate the early post-mortem histories of individuals whose remains ended up in various states of dis/articulation and diverse depositional contexts. Disarticulated remains frequently displayed arrested or extensive bacterial bioerosion, which was also found in articulated and semi-articulated skeletons. Additionally, remains deposited in similar contexts, as well as articulated and disarticulated remains deposited together in the same context, often showed different histotaphonomic characteristics, suggesting diverse early post-mortem trajectories. As a result, we argue that Neolithic deathways in southeastern Italy incorporated a high level of diversity in the early post-mortem treatment of the body. A framework for funerary practices emerges, whereby disarticulated remains probably originated from bodies which had been buried previously and subjected to varying extents of shelter, exposure to invertebrates, and duration of burial. However, we acknowledge the ongoing research into the origins of bacterial bioerosion and the problem of equifinality, which leaves open the possibility for further scenarios of early post-mortem treatment.
新石器时代丧葬习俗的多样性日益得到认可。在意大利东南部,最近的研究引起了人们对同一地点和整个地区多种处理死者方式共存的关注。在这项研究中,我们通过对骨骼生物侵蚀的组织学研究来解决这些不同的死亡方式如何形成一个区域的仪式实践框架。从普利亚地区四个地点的关节、半关节和脱节遗骸中获得了样本,每个地点都呈现出不同的处理和处置死者的方式。通过对骨骼薄片进行光学显微镜分析,以通过细菌生物侵蚀、染色、内含物和 Wedl 隧道等特征来描述微观结构的保存情况。我们研究了那些遗骸最终处于不同脱节和多样化沉积环境的个体的早期死后历史。脱节的遗骸经常显示出被阻止或广泛的细菌生物侵蚀,这在关节和半关节骨骼中也发现了。此外,在相似环境中沉积的遗骸,以及在同一环境中一起沉积的关节和脱节遗骸,通常表现出不同的组织学特征,表明存在不同的早期死后轨迹。因此,我们认为意大利东南部的新石器时代死亡方式在尸体的早期死后处理中包含了高度的多样性。出现了一种丧葬实践框架,脱节的遗骸可能源自以前埋葬过的尸体,这些尸体经历了不同程度的遮蔽、无脊椎动物暴露和埋葬时间。然而,我们承认正在对细菌生物侵蚀的起源和等效性问题进行研究,这为进一步的早期死后处理方案留下了可能性。