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  1. Underneath multiple grave layers, an 8-year-old child was buried in a fetal position. ... the necklace is believed to have played a key role in performing the inhumation rituals, understood as a ...

  2. Jun 23, 2009 · As such, the differential treatment of men and women was not the result of status distinctions, but reflects their different positions and roles within Early Bronze Age kinship structures. In particular, the circulation of the cremated remains of the female dead played an important role in facilitating social, material and biological reproduction through the maintenance of inter-group ...

    • Joanna Bruck
    • 2009
  3. We also seek to consider the ways in which scholarly attitudes to the dead, as an object of study, have impacted upon the kind of questions asked of the material and the various lenses through which burial has been examined, in particular by researchers working on different periods.

  4. Examples of how to use “inhumation” in a sentence from Cambridge Dictionary.

  5. Jun 26, 2023 · The results of aDNA analysis proved that three of them (a woman and two young children) were maternally related, so the contemporaneous multiple burial of at least these three related individuals, if not all four, could be understood as the expression of this strong social tie (Fig 2; Deguilloux et al Citation 2018). Another example (although not a multiple burial per se), where biological ...

  6. Dec 3, 2019 · From both sides of the funeral process, the personal touch becomes and remains a largely female responsibility. From the right poem to the color of the casket, women must navigate these details and questions, often while in the middle of their own grieving process. “Women are the heads of dealing with death,” Bourdeau adds.

  7. Inhumation. In subject area: Social Sciences. 'Inhumation' refers to the burial practice of placing deceased individuals in graves, which was one of the earliest forms of funerary practices observed in the Paleolithic period. AI generated definition based on: Encyclopedia of Archaeology (Second Edition), 2024.

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