COLIMA.- A
burial site with the osseous remains of some 28 individuals, whose antiquity is
estimated to be around 1,500 and 2,500 years, was discovered by archaeologists
from the National Institute of
Anthropology and History (INAH) east of the city of Colima. The quantity of
skeletons found here lead archaeologists to believe this is a pre Hispanic
burial site related to western cultures.
Marco Zavaleta Lucido, an
archaeologist of the INAH Center in Colima, explained that this area, of about
114 meters square [374.01 square feet], has burials distributed inside and
outside of a shaft tomb. The tomb consists of a funerary complex made up by a
vertical well of varying depth that leads to a vault where the dead were
deposited.
Inside this tomb they located the osseous remains of 10
individuals; around it they found 16 other burials, two of which are double
having two skeletons.
“At first they identified the burials because of
the odd rock groupings that were used to cover them, they also found evidence of
ceramic material which drove us deeper into the investigation”, explained Marco
Zavaleta.
“At the burial’s center –he added– they discovered a unique
shaft tomb; unique, because its shaft (1.2 meters [3.9 feet] deep) was covered
by a mud mix that had not been found in Colima.
“The tomb’s access is a
shaft with a 70 centimeter [27.55 inches] diameter, located 80 centimeters
[31.49 inches] underneath the street. The shaft’s end is decorated with a
stepping stone oriented from west to east that allows access to the vault. The
vault contains a great quantity of piled up bones in disarray, from which we
have identified eight craniums. However, by the great quantity of osseous
remains, it’s possible there might be more than 10 individuals”.
Rosa
Maria Flores, physical anthropologist at INAH, detected a perfectly round
perforation in the temple of one of the craniums, which will be studied in
detail at the Anthropology Laboratory at the Regional Museum in Colima, to
confirm it was a trepanation and analyze the motives behind its fulfillment.
According to the archaeologist, the shaft tomb held more than 20 ceramic
offerings, among them: pots, bowls, plates, censers and two hollow bowls in the
shape of dogs. “By association with the pieces –characteristic in this entity
and known in the Comala style–, the osseous remains must date back to the first
five hundred years after Christ”, explained the archaeologist.
INAH
specialists consider the fact that this funerary space could have been used more
than once “maybe as a type of family crypt, where they were deposited after
death”; also, given the tomb’s construction and the incorporation of offerings
these people could have belonged to the elite, although customary accompanying
ornaments have not been found, with the exception of some green beads found near
one of the craniums.
Around the tomb, two meters away, they found a
great quantity of burials, which correspond to wells that were excavated in
tepetate “limestone”. Marco Zavaleta indicated that up to date they have only
investigated the north and south areas, where they have recovered 16 burials,
two of them doubles.
It’s important to mention that 6 of the 16 burials
–the double burial counted among them– contained offerings with ceramic objects
(pots, bowls, cups, and anthropomorphic female figurines with short skirts,
loincloth and a headdress), along with tomb markers at the topmost part, which
highlight them among the other funerary spaces and suggests that these could
have been individuals with a high social ranks.
http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=62476#.UY0scGeyLyA
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