학술논문

Inhumation and cremation: identifying funerary practices and reuse of space through forensic taphonomy at Cova Foradada (Calafell, Spain).
Document Type
Article
Source
Archaeological & Anthropological Sciences. Apr2022, Vol. 14 Issue 4, p1-31. 31p.
Subject
*CREMATION
*FORENSIC taphonomy
*ANCIENT funeral rites & ceremonies
*BRONZE Age
*NEOLITHIC Period
Language
ISSN
1866-9557
Abstract
The study of human remains from the perspective of forensic taphonomy facilitates a holistic understanding of ancient funerary behavior, and it is even more important when dealing with commingled assemblages. This is the case of Cova Foradada (Calafell, Spain), where more than 2500 disarticulated, fragmented, and commingled human remains, both burned and unburned, were recovered, belonging to at least 23 individuals. This study aims to reconstruct the taphonomic history of the site and identify the funerary treatments applied. Radiocarbon dating indicates the use of the cave at the beginning and end of the Neolithic, and taphonomic analysis has enabled us to differentiate a third period of funerary use. The results of this study have revealed that burned and unburned remains present in the cave constitute two different accumulations separated in time that were mixed due to multiple post-depositional agents and processes, including anthropogenic activities. The cremation pattern of the burned remains evidences the cremation of green bones, probably whole bodies, inside the cave, representing an intermediate practice between collective burials and the individual cremation characteristic of the Late Bronze Age. There is, therefore, repeated use of the same space with a sepulchral concept, from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age, but involving different funerary practices: inhumation and cremation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]