
Ritualistic burials of teenagers — 5,000 years old — found in Turkey. Who were they?
Ancient communities of equals have seen the same success as those led by a king, but as time goes on, each form of governance eventually changes.
The area of modern-day Turkey during the Bronze Age was understood to be a 'small-scale, egalitarian setting,' but new analysis of 5,000-year-old burials shed doubt on this conclusion — and raise more questions than answers.
Başur Höyük is a site from the early Bronze Age located in Siirt, Turkey, that dates to the late fourth and early third millennia B.C., according to a study published March 17 in the peer-reviewed Cambridge Archaeological Journal.
The site is considered a 'gateway' settlement in an obsidian-rich region near converging rivers, acting as a 'transit point' for copper and other resources from the highlands to make their way south to Mesopotamia's lowlands, according to the study.
When a nearby political system collapsed between 3100 and 2800 B.C., Başur Höyük 'became a focus for the performance of conspicuous and sometimes violent funerary rites,' researchers said.
In the new study, researchers analyzed subsidiary burials, or the remains of people that were buried near or around a central burial.
The burials were described as 'impressive' and filled with tons of high-value goods like weapons, animal-topped amulets, sceptres, goblets, medallions and stone playing pieces, researchers said.
But the more intriguing features of the burials are the human bones.
'Based on skeleton fusion and dentition, they are identified mainly as adolescents aged between 12 and 16 years,' researchers said. 'For instance, two individuals buried in a richly endowed stone tomb are estimated to have been 12 years old at time of death, while the eight subsidiary burials crammed against its entrance in Grave 17 ranged from 12 to 18 years.'
The bones showed 'penetrating' blows to the head as likely causes of death, and one burial had 'staggering quantities of metalwork' including textile pins and more than 100 spearheads, according to the study.
'All the bodies associated with this grand burial rite were clothed in elaborate costumes, decorated with non-local materials, of which only the associated beadwork and fragments of textile survive, along with metal fastening pins, some of which reached outsized proportions for a human wearer,' researchers said.
As researchers hoped to establish the biological relationships between the teenagers likely sacrificed together, they found that a significant portion of the bodies belonged to teen girls, suggesting a male warrior cult or initiation was unlikely.
'The fact that they are mostly adolescents is fascinating and surprising. It highlights how little thought scientists and historians have really given to the importance of adolescence as a crucial state in the human life cycle,' lead author David Wengrow told LiveScience. 'So we are dealing with adolescents brought together, or coming together voluntarily, from biologically unrelated groups to carry out a very extreme form of ritual.'
However, why they were sacrificed is still a mystery.
When the burials were first discovered, archaeologists thought they may have belonged to young royals who then sacrificed their attendants. But with additional research suggesting Başur Höyük wasn't a king-based society, it now seems more likely that they were buried together because of their age, and they may not be directly associated, Wengrow told the outlet.
'Much more likely, what we see in the cemetery is a subset of a larger group, other members of which survived the ritual process and went on to full adulthood,' Wengrow told LiveScience.
Siirt is in southeastern Turkey, near the borders of Syria and Iraq.
The research team includes Wengrow, Brenna Hassett, Haluk Sağlamtimur, William Marsh, Selina Brace, Suzanne E. Pilaar Birch, Emma L. Baysal, Metin Batıhan, İnan Aydoğan, Öznur Özmen Batıhan and Ian Barnes.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Is Earth's rotation speeding up? Why this July day may be shortest so far in 2025
Does it feel like there's not enough time in the day for everything? Well, that could be because some upcoming days are actually getting shorter. In fact, today might just be the shortest day you'll ever experience. Ok, maybe it won't be short enough for anyone to actually notice, but every millisecond counts, right? As much as a millisecond or more could be shaved off the clock on Wednesday, July 9, on account of how the moon's position relative to Earth is influencing our planet's rotation. Here's what to know about why Earth's rotation is speeding up, and how it will shorten three days this summer. Is Earth's rotation speeding up? Earth takes 24 hours to complete a full rotation in a standard day, equal to exactly 86,400 seconds. If a standard day is shortened or lengthened by a number of milliseconds, that added or detracted time is referred to as "length of day," according to the website TimeAndDate. Until 2020, the shortest "length of day" ever recorded by atomic clocks was -1.05 ms, meaning that Earth completed one daily rotation in 1.05 milliseconds less than 86,400 seconds. "Since then, however, Earth has managed to shatter this old record every year by around half a millisecond," astrophysicist Graham Jones wrote for TimeAndDate. That culminated on July 5, 2023 with the shortest day of all time, with a "length of day" of -1.66 ms, according to Jones. While the variations are expected, recent research suggests that human activity is also contributing to Earth's changing rotation. Researchers at NASA calculated that dwindling ice and groundwater and rising seas has actually increased the length of our days since 2000 by 1.33 milliseconds per century. Will the Earth spin faster July 9? Is July 9 the shortest day? Scientists anticipate that Earth's rotation will quicken enough to create three shorter days between July and August. The first is Wednesday, July 9, which will have a predicted -1.30 ms "length of day," according to TimeAndDate. The next two shortened days, though, will be be even more truncated. Scientists predicted a -1.38 ms "length of day" July 22, and a -1.51 ms "length of day" Aug. 5. On these days, the moon will be at its furthest from the Earth's equator, changing its gravitational pull and causing our planet to spin just a tiny bit faster on its axis, according to science news website LiveScience. Will the sped-up day be noticeable? Of course, you're unlikely to notice such a miniscule difference in your standard 24-hour day. But scientists who track and operate atomic clocks may be facing a bit of a predicament. First introduced in the 1950s, atomic clocks replaced how scientists previously measured the length of a day by tracking the Earth's rotation and position of the sun. The clocks are also capable of measuring in billionths of a second, or nanoseconds, which are synchronized globally to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC.) If the clocks are thrown off even a tiny amount, it could also throw off computers, servers, GPS signals and other networks that rely on accurate times, David Gozzard, an experimental physicis at the University of Western Australia, told the Guardian. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Is Earth spinning faster? July 9, 2 other days may be shortest of 2025 Solve the daily Crossword


National Geographic
6 days ago
- National Geographic
4,000-year-old victim was shot in the back—and survived with an arrow to the rib
A flint arrowhead lodged in a rib from a person who lived in the Spanish Pyrenees more than 4,000 years ago was most likely shot during a skirmish with a rival clan, researchers say. "It is direct evidence of a violent conflict episode," says Carlos Tornero, who led the team that unearthed the rib in a mountain cave 6,000 feet above sea level near the Spanish-French border. His team announced the finding July 8. Previous excavations at the cave—called Roc de les Orenetes, or "Rock of the Swallows" in Catalan—unearthed thousands of human bones. Some had fractures and cut marks apparently caused by stone-tipped spears, arrows, and copper or bronze axes and daggers. The researchers published their analysis of the bones last year and concluded the injuries came from conflicts with other groups. This latest finding reinforces that idea. The interior of the cave as seen from the entrance. Photograph by Leo Pérez, IPHES-CERCA "This extraordinary discovery is direct proof, and confirms our initial hypothesis," says Tornero, an archaeologist at the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB) and a researcher at the Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution (IPHES-CERCA). Little is known about who shot the arrow, except that they were probably from an enemy group who fought violently against the people later buried in the cave—in a dispute over territory, or perhaps access to resources. The researchers dated the violent episodes to between 2550 and 2150 B.C. Tornero says the victims in the cave were likely from a single clan of Early Bronze Age farming people; but their attackers may have been nomadic hunters. The archer shot this individual from behind so the arrow lodged in their back, within the rib cage but below the shoulder blade. "Undoubtedly, the person who was struck had little ability to react in time to avoid it," says Tornero. Excavation work at the Roc de les Orenetes site, where human remains dating to 2400 BC can be seen in the foreground. Photograph by Leo Pérez, IPHES-CERCA The moment of the discovery of a flint arrowhead with a broken tip, dated to 2400 BC. Photograph by Iván Ramírez, IPHES-CERCA Each arrowhead found in the cave was likely once embedded in the flesh of the dead people interred there, he says. But this individual did not die from their arrow wound—instead, the rib bone shows signs of healing that indicate the victim lived for a long time after their close encounter with death, Tornero says. Roc de les Orenetes was discovered in 1969, and the remains of 60 bodies—many bearing scars from battle—have since been unearthed there, although only one-third of the site has been excavated, according to Tornero. The newly found arrowhead is another indicator of the violent conflicts in prehistory, as well as final proof for Tornero that the ancient people buried at Roc de les Orenetes were sometimes the victims of violence—and may have been the perpetrators of deadly violence in return.
Yahoo
7 days ago
- Yahoo
Get ready for the 'moon illusion.' July's full moon to appear low in Michigan skies
July's full moon will be the farthest from the sun this year as both the Earth and moon make their orbits, but it also will provide a good opportunity to check out the "moon illusion." The buck moon, set to peak July 10, comes a week after Earth reached its farthest point from the sun in its orbit, according to Live Science. Thus, the July full moon will also be at its farthest point from the sun as well. The moon will appear low in the night sky this week, giving it an unnaturally large appearance known as the moon illusion. "Photographs prove that the moon is the same width near the horizon as when it's high in the sky, but that's not what we perceive with our eyes," NASA says. "Thus, it's an illusion rooted in the way our brains process visual information. Even though we've been observing it for thousands of years, there's still not a satisfying scientific explanation for exactly why we see it." The National Weather Service predicts chances of partly cloudy skies throughout most of the state overnight July 10, with the full moon likely to be visible at moonrise. Look up in the evening sky to see the buck moon, set to appear full July 9 and 10, and visible as it rises above the horizon at night. Here's what to know: How low will the full moon appear? July's full moon will look quite low in the sky after sunset, says. This comes as the sun appears high in the sky during the day following the summer solstice. Also, the rare major lunar standstill sees the sun's gravity impact the moon's orbit in relation to Earth, making it appear especially low. Why does the moon look yellowish near the horizon? The moon tends to have a more yellow or orange hue near the horizon than when it's high overhead, NASA said. "This happens because the Moon's light travels a longer distance through the atmosphere. As it travels a longer path, more of the shorter, bluer wavelengths of light are scattered away, leaving more of the longer, redder wavelengths. (Dust or pollution can also deepen the reddish color)," NASA explained. How did the buck moon get its name? The name buck moon comes from bucks, or male deer, reaching their antlers' full-growth during this season, according to the Old Farmer's Almanac. When does the full moon peak in July 2025? The full moon will peak at 4:37 p.m. on July 10, 2025. While high or low clouds are expected in various areas across Michigan overnight July 10, forecasters expect the buck moon to remain visible in most regions in the early part of the night, per the weather service. Is the buck moon a supermoon? No, the buck moon is not a supermoon. What phase of the lunar cycle is the moon in now? The moon is currently in its waxing gibbous phase, at 95% illumination, according to The moon's next phases in July 2025 are: Full Moon: July 10 Last Quarter: July 17 New Moon: July 24 Where can you watch the buck moon in Michigan? Michigan is home to six dark sky state parks, three international dark sky parks and an international dark sky sanctuary. The Alpena area has three Dark Sky Preserves: Rockport State Recreation Area, Thompson's Harbor State Park and Negwegon State Park. In Mackinaw City, Headlands International Dark Sky Park. In Empire, Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. In Munising, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. In Paradise, the Great Lakes Museum and Whitefish Point Light Station and Tahquamenon Falls State Park. In Port Austin, Port Crescent State Park. In Clayton, Lake Hudson Recreation Area. In Carp Lake, Wilderness State Park. Keweenaw Dark Sky Park in Keweenaw County and Dr. T.K. Lawless Park in Cass County are international spots. And, finally, the Beaver Island State Wildlife Research Area is an international sanctuary. When is the next full moon after July? The sturgeon moon will peak Aug. 9, 2025. Contact Jenna Prestininzi: jprestininzi@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Moon illusion will make buck moon appear larger as it illuminates Michigan skies Solve the daily Crossword