al-Hasani
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Two hundred Paleolithic tombs have been discovered in the western al-Mahwit region of Yemen, reports say.
The tombs contain embalmed mummies and other funerary relics, according to the state-run Saba news agency.
They were carved into the rock and have one or more chambers depending on how many bodies they held, Mohammad Ahmad Qassim, head of antiquities for Al-Mahwit province, told Saba.
Among the objects found in the tombs were earthenware utensils and weapons.
The artefacts were very effectively preserved and were put in niches carved in the walls of the tombs.
Over 1,000 other Paleolithic artefacts were also found in the Bani Saad area, Mr Qassim added.
The findings point to the existence of a developed culture in the region at the time, Saba reports.
The Paleolithic period, the larger part of the prehistoric Stone Age, is thought to have begun over 2m years ago and ended around 8,000 BC.
BBC News - 'Paleolithic tombs discovered' in Yemen
The study is still ongoing and due to the current instability of Yemen archaeologists have not worked at the site since the discovery in 2012. If finally confirmed those might be the oldest mummies found to date.
The recently discovered Yemeni Mummies will form a new area of study for mummies across the Middle East, or at the very least in the Arabian Peninsula, said head of the delegation from the French Poiter’s University, during a visit to the newly discovered mummy from the Shoub area, near the capital Sana’a.
The visitors also examined the other mummies at the National Museum on Saturday, and the French experts affirmed the importance of studying Yemen’s mummies which, according to experts, are unique.
The expert, who was accompanied by specialists from the French National Institute, made it clear that the historical Yemeni practice of mummification had a unique system of treatments, thought not to exist in Egypt and Africa. Such thoughts were affirmed during initial studies of the mummies at Sana’a University, which included a study into the newly discovered mummy.
He noted that the results of the study, due to be released soon, included studies into a number of test samples from the mummy. The information gained from the tests aims to create a better understanding of Yemeni history, including medical history and age related diseases and may help identify the development of major diseases. The results also hope to reveal the nature of nutrition at the time, including daily dietary staples.
Yemen is the second country after Egypt in terms of mummy related finds, said Director of Public Relations at the Yemeni General Authority for Antiquities and Museums (YGAAM) Mohammad al-Halabi. “Unfortunately, we have not had a specialized section for mummies until now, despite their importance in terms of scientific and historical researches,” he complained.
Earlier, a team of French experts had met with the head of the YGAAM, Abdullah Bawazir and discussed with him preparations for the signing of a cooperation treaty between YGAAM and the University of Poitiers’ Human Being Museum. The treaty of cooperation is centered on the field of mummies.
Newly-discovered Yemeni mummies present new field for researchers
This British archeologist apparently led the expedition.
Stephen Buckley - Archaeology, The University of YorkBiography
I obtained my first degree in Chemistry (BSc, University of Sheffield), before taking a MSc in Analytical Chemistry and Instrumentation at Loughborough University of Technology (the research project for my masters being entitled ‘Identification of the Mummification ‘Resins’ Employed in Ancient Egypt in an Early 18th Dynasty Tomb in the Valley of the Kings’, followed by a PhD in archaeological chemistry, on the embalming materials used in ancient Egyptian mummification, from the University of Bristol. As part of York University’s Mummy Research Team (set up in 1999), I worked on archaeological projects in the Valley of the Kings, Egypt, the Yemeni Highlands, north-west of Sana’a, Rome, and a number of museums, before becoming a Wellcome Research Fellow in Bioarchaeology in 2004 (joint Archaeology and Chemistry) based at Archaeology’s BioArch Centre.
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