Publication details

Ritual Burials in a Prehistoric Mining Shaft in the Krumlov Forest (Czechia)

Authors

VANICKOVA Eva VYMAZALOVÁ Kateřina VARGOVÁ Lenka TVRDY Zdenek OLIVA Martin BRZOBOHATÁ Kristýna BURIÁNKOVÁ FIALOVÁ Dana SKOUPY Radim KRZYZANEK Vladislav NÝVLTOVÁ FIŠÁKOVÁ Miriam DROZDOVÁ Eva

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
web https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12520-025-02251-1
Doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-025-02251-1
Keywords Neolithic; Facial reconstruction; Ritual burials; Human sacrifice; Mining area; Bone pathologies
Description The Krumlov Forest (Czechia) revealed one of the largest chert mining fields in Europe, dated from the Mesolithic to the Hallstatt period. The largest shafts of the Late Lengyel culture were located on a slope below a re-deposited boulder. Shaft No. 4 yielded two skeletons of females; the lower one had a newborn placed on her breasts. Both females were found to be the shortest of the then population as a whole; they were weak, diseased and poorly fed during their childhood. By contrast, as adults they were fed with meat and carried out heavy work, which is corroborated by marked muscle attachments and vertebral degeneration. Genetic analysis proved that both females were relatives. In order to complete the story of these women, the conclusions mentioned were supplemented with an anthropological reconstruction of their appearance.

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