Email to editor
Email to Support
Thuglak Online Store
Cho's Collections


Kathadi Ramamurthi's


Tamil Telefilms
6 VCD/DVD Collections


Bharatanatyam
5 - VCD/DVD Collections


Yoga
8 - VCD/DVD Collections


Carnatic Music - Vocal
25 - VCD/DVD Collections


Devotional
21 - VCD/DVD Collections


Carnatic Music - Instrument
10 - VCD/DVD Collections


Mouli's
6 - VCD/DVD Collections


Crazy's
22 - VCD/DVD Collections


S.Ve.Shekher's
15 - VCD/DVD Collections


Kuchupudi
6 VCD/DVD Collections


Y.Gee.Mahendra's
8 - VCD/DVD Collections


Dummies Drama's
6 - VCD/DVD Collections

8,000-year-old human skeleton found in a Turkey tomb

Category :International Sub Category :Europe
2009-08-02 00:00:00
   Views : 82

Ankara, Aug 2 (Xinhua) An 8,000-year-old human skeleton was found during excavations in one of the oldest residential areas in southern Turkey, a media report said.

The skeleton was discovered inside a Neolithic-age tomb unearthed in Yumuktepe Hoyuk of the southern Mersin province by archeologists from the Italian Lecce University and Turkish Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported.

Besides the skeleton, three bowls, a wheat kernel and a dried olive seed from that era were also found in the tomb, it added.

'Vases, bowls and food products were often put in tombs in the late Neolithic period. This shows that people living in that era believed in life after death,' said professor Isabella Caneva of Italian Lecce University.

Systematic excavations in Yumuktepe Hoyuk first started in 1936 under the supervision of British archeologist John Garstang.

Since 1993, the excavations have been conducted by a team headed by Caneva, the report said.


Author :Xinhua



Bookmark and Share

Related News

  • Four human heads found in coolers in Mexico
  • 1,874 file nominations for Haryana assembly poll
  • Nine swine flu deaths in India, toll 286
  • Missing brothers found murdered in fields
  • Businessman's house burgled of cash, jewellery worth Rs.8 mn
  • 118 fresh swine flu cases in Delhi
  • G20 to replace G8 as global economic policy forum
  • India's 1998 n-tests were successful, assert scientists