ANKARA: Stone ornaments found around the mouths and ears of skeletons at an 11,000-year-old burial site in southeast Turkiye prove that humans have been piercing their bodies since prehistoric times and thinking about self-image, archaeologists said.
Although small, thin and pointed stones have been found on several digs in the Fertile Crescent, which includes parts of modern-day Turkiye and Iraq, and which is where ancient humans settled to farm, it was not known what they were used for - until now.
“None of them have ever been found on the bodies in their original locations,” said Emma Louise Baysal, a professor of archaeology at Ankara University, who co-authored an article on the ornaments. But at the Boncuklu Tarla site, “we have them all on the skeletons very close to the ear holes, to the lips,” she said, allowing experts to conclude for the first time they would definitely be used as piercings.
Some wear on the lower teeth of the skulls also showed that the individuals would have had lower lip piercings when alive. “I think it shows we share similar concerns with the way that we look and that these people were also thinking hard about how they presented themselves to the world,” she said.
Published in Dawn, March 21st, 2024
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