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posted by martyb on Saturday April 09 2016, @03:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the predates-Prince-Albert-in-a-tin dept.

An ancient site in Laos, known as the Plain of Jars, is finally beginning to give up its secrets, as the first major excavation effort since the 1930s digs into its mysteries.

Strewn over hundreds of square miles in central Laos, thousands of ceramic jars ranging from three to nine feet in height pepper the landscape, scattered in clusters of anywhere between one and 400 individual pieces.

[...] And while the specific function of these jars is still to be determined, those involved in the most recent work have their theories.

One such theory is that the pots were actually used for decomposition, as lead researcher Dougald O'Reilly of Australian National University in Canberra explained in a statement.

The professor hypothesized that once the process was complete, the bones would then be buried nearby. But whatever the details, he is now convinced that the jars "were used for the disposal of the dead."

Wikipedia says, "[Grave sites] are one of the chief sources of information on prehistoric cultures, and numerous archaeological cultures are defined by their burial customs."

What does it say about ancient cultures in Laos that they put their dead in big stone jars?


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  • (Score: 2) by PinkyGigglebrain on Saturday April 09 2016, @05:09PM

    by PinkyGigglebrain (4458) on Saturday April 09 2016, @05:09PM (#329430)

    What does it say about ancient cultures in Laos that they put their dead in big stone jars?

     
    That they had different funeral traditions than other cultures we know of.

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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Saturday April 09 2016, @08:34PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Saturday April 09 2016, @08:34PM (#329466) Journal

    That they had different funeral traditions than other cultures we know of.

    And at a stroke, the entire discipline of Egyptology was rendered null and void. Scads of wrinkled old men with long gray beards emerged from the crypts where they had been struggling to decipher the hieroglyphs incised on the lids of sarcophagi, and blinked in the warm afternoon sun. Professors Smythe and St. John settled down at a nearby ashlar to play a round of cribbage. Professor Macyntyre collapsed where she stood and sobbed uncontrollably into her tartan handkerchief. Jean Marie de la Roche wandered off calling, "Du vin! Du vin!" Professor Wembley gibbered and gesticulated, having been driven round the twist at the echoing announcement that he had squandered 60 years of his life to learn that Ancient Egyptians had merely had, "a different funeral tradition..."

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  • (Score: 2) by mrchew1982 on Sunday April 10 2016, @06:27AM

    by mrchew1982 (3565) on Sunday April 10 2016, @06:27AM (#329599)

    If I remember correctly their current funeral traditions are very strange by Western standards. They burry their deceased in what amounts to a compost pile for one year, letting the soft bits decompose, then dig the bones up, clean them with pressurized water and box them up to take them home! Presumably the bones are placed into some sort of family shrine back at their residence.