Wednesday, 9 May, 2012
voxy.co.nz
University of Otago researchers working in remote Cambodian
mountains are shedding new light on the lost history of an unidentified
people by studying their enigmatic burial rituals.
The Otago researchers have now provided the first radiocarbon dates
for unusual jar and log coffin interments on exposed ledges high in
southern Cambodia's rugged Cardamom Mountains. Since 2003, they have
been working to geo-locate and survey 10 interment sites and to date
these using samples of coffin wood, tooth enamel and bone.
With colleagues from Cambodia, Australia, USA and Scotland, Drs Nancy
Beavan and Sian Halcrow of the Department of Anatomy have just
published the dating of four sites in the journal Radiocarbon. These
reveal that the mysterious funerary rituals, which are unlike any other
recorded in Cambodia, were practiced from at least 1395AD to 1650AD.
Dr Beavan, who is currently in Cambodia, says that this period
coincides with the decline and fall of the powerful Kingdom of Angkor,
which was seated in the lowlands.
"Funeral practices in the Angkor Kingdom and its successors involved
cremation rather than anything remotely like those found at sites we are
studying. This stark difference suggests that, in cultural terms, these
unidentified mountain dwellers were a 'world apart' from their lowland
contemporaries."
To date, the bulk of research that makes up what is known about
cultural history of the Khmer regions has focused on the lowlands, she
says.
"Through our work we hope to broaden the understanding of this
history beyond the legacies of the great Khmer Kingdom alone to those
who lived within its margins," she says.
Dr Sian Halcrow says that archaeological findings from another of the
10 sites, which she and Dr Beavan are currently preparing for
publication, will offer important new clues about who these mysterious
people were, their culture, trade connections and biological adaptation
to the environment.
Given the rugged and remote locations of the sites, the fieldwork has not been without its challenges, Dr Beavan says.
"In 2010 one of our campsites was invaded by a wild elephant in the
dead of night and it had to be driven off by our camp crew banging on
cooking pots. It turns out we had pitched camp between two tempting
stands of wild banana. We packed up and headed off soon after that."
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