Thursday, May 14, 2015

Spain’s Red Lady was buried with flowers

Pollen found in the 18,700-year-old tomb of Spain’s Red Lady suggest that she was buried with flowers.

The burial of the so-called Red Lady, dating back to the Upper Palaeolithic, was discovered in El Mirón cave (Cantabria) in 2010. The Journal of Archaeological Science has devoted a special edition to all the studies conducted at this unique burial site, because there are hardly any Palaeolithic tombs like this one which is intact and which has not been contaminated. One study is the research led by the UPV/EHU’s Ikerbasque lecturer Mª José Iriarte, who analysed the remains of fossilised pollen dating back more than 16,000 years ago and which appeared on the tomb. “They put whole flowers on the tomb, but it has not been possible to say whether the aim of placing plants was to do with a ritual offering for the dead person, or whether it was for a simpler purpose like, for example, to ward off the bad smells associated with the burial,” explained Iriarte.

[Full story]

Story: UPV/EHU | Photo: UPV/EHU

No comments:

Post a Comment