Journal article
Isotopic Insights into Mortuary Ritual in the Cardamom Mountains of Cambodia
Louise Shewan, Richard Armstrong, D O'reilly, S Halcrow, N Beavan, T Sokha
Antiquity: a quarterly review of archaeology | Cambridge University Press | Published : 2020
Abstract
The use of coffins and jars as funerary receptacles was common across Southeast Asia. During the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries AD, cremation was the dominant mortuary tradition on the Angkorian plains, but in the Cardamom Mountains to the south, contemporaneous groups practised a unique burial tradition involving the deposition of un-cremated bone in exposed ceramic vessels and log coffins. The authors present the first geochemical analysis of individuals from this highland culture, specifically the site of Phnom Pel. The childhood diets of those interred in jars and coffins may have been sourced from different areas within the Cardamom Mountains, suggesting that the individuals came fr..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (DP0984968 and DP110101997).