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21.02.2017, 12:45 - anyoshoes - Rank 6 - 1072 Posts
Once the adze fulfilled its ritual duties, a hard stone was ground across the tool’s sharp edge to render it dull and useless, further microscopic study suggests. The researchers regard this act as a symbolic killing of the adze. The dulled tool blade was then placed in the pit,
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, next to the post grave marker,
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, perhaps to accompany the cremated individual to the afterlife.
/sites/default/files/2016/11/main/articles/110916_bb_irishburial_inline.jpg“By 9,000 years ago,
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, people in Ireland were making very high quality artifacts specifically to be placed in graves,
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, giving us a tantalizing glimpse of ancient belief systems concerning death and the afterlife,
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,” Little says. Her conclusion challenges a popular assumption among researchers that stone tools found in ancient hunter-gatherers’ graves belonged to the deceased while they were still alive. In that scenario,
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, tools and other grave items played no role in burial activities and rituals.
Archaeologist Erik Brinch Petersen of the University of Copenhagen is skeptical. No other European stone adzes or axes from around 10,
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,000 to 6,000 years ago display blunted edges,
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, Petersen says. That makes it difficult to say how such an unusual artifact was used or whether it was intended to accompany a cremated person to the afterlife. In addition, researchers have found only a few European cremations from the same time period.

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