Iron Age Bones Discovered In Denmark Reveal Bizarre Ancient Rituals

Ancient Bones Reveal Bizarre Iron Age Rituals
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The bones of dozens of Iron Age warriors found in Denmark were collected and ritually mutilated after spending months on the battlefield, archaeologists say.

At least six months after the soldiers died, their bones were collected, scraped of remaining flesh, sorted and dumped in a lake. Some were handled in a truly bizarre manner; for instance, four pelvises were found strung on a stick.

"We think it's a kind of ritual closure of the war," said Mads Kähler Holst, project manager at the dig and head of the department of archaeology at the Moesgård Museum in Denmark. The victors seem to have carried out their gruesome work on a spit of land extending into the lake where the bones were dumped, the researchers said. [See Photos of the Mutilated Iron Age Skeletons]

Bog bodies

The site of the boneyard is in East Jutland, in a wetland area known as Alken Enge. Drainage work and peat digging have been turning up ancient human remains in this bog for decades, Holst told Live Science.

Formal excavation of the site finds it to be a mass grave dating back about 2,000 years, to the transition from B.C. to A.D. At the time, the area was about 186 miles (300 kilometers) north of the farthest reach of the Roman Empire, Holst said, and would have been occupied by Germanic tribes.

Archaeologists have turned up at least 60 skeletonsor parts of skeletons in what used to be the bed of Lake Mossø at the site. The lake still exists, but it's smaller than it was 2,000 years ago. The 60 catalogued remains don't include bones found previously — or the many more skeletons archaeologists expect to discover.

"We have trenches going through different areas, so we know we are only touching on a small part of what is actually there," Holst said.

Most of the bones are found disarticulated from one another, and many bear the marks of the battlefield: trauma from swords, spears and axes. Spearheads, an ax, the tip of a sword and shields have also been found at the site, Holst said. All of the bodies are male.

Macabre ritual

All of the evidence points to a straightforward defeat in battle. But the bones also bear strange marks of tampering after the soldiers' death.

First, many have been gnawed by animals, including large predators such as wolves, dogs and badgers, Holst said. The species present and amount of scavenging suggest the bodies stayed out in the open for at least six months to a year, he said.

After this time, someone collected the corpses and sorted at least some of the bones by type. Marks of cutting and scraping suggest the bones were separated deliberately, and that they had any remaining flesh removed. Animal sacrifices and ceramic pots mixed in with the remains suggest some sort of religious ritual, Holst said. Along with the pelvises strung like beads on a stick, there is evidence that leg bones and thighbones were sorted, too, he said.

From a land spit extending into what was then the lake, the ancient people conducted these rituals and then dumped the bones. Holst and his colleagues know nothing for sure about the victors and the slaughtered, but they suspect that the winners had a geographical attachment to the area, given that they were around long enough to conduct these rituals. There are examples of ritual treatment of defeated enemies in what is now France, Switzerland and England in the centuries prior to this find, Holst said, but nothing like it has ever been seen in Denmark or the surrounding areas.

The delay in disposing of the bodies could have been part of the ritual, Holst said. Or, perhaps the battle was part of a longer war, and the winners did not return to the bones until the conflict was over, Holst added.

The findings were announced July 28 by Aarhus University. This season's excavation at the site will continue until Aug. 8.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Mummy Mysteries Revealed In CT Scans
Mummy of Tamut(01 of21)
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The Mummy of Tamut, a temple singer around 900 BC. Scientists at the British Museum used CT scans and volume graphics software to go beneath the bandages, revealing the skin, bones, internal organs, and in one case a brain-scooping rod left inside a skull by embalmers. (credit:Associated Press)
Mummy of Tamut(02 of21)
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Sarcophagus of a priestess named Tayesmutengebtiu, also called Tamut. Found in Thebes, 22nd Dynasty (c. 900 BC). (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy CT Scan(03 of21)
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A mummy undergoing a CT scan at the Royal Brompton Hospital. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Tamut(04 of21)
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CT scan 3D visualization of the mummified remains of Tayesmutengebtiu, also called Tamut, showing the wrappings. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Tamut(05 of21)
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CT scan 3D visualization of Tamut's mummified remains, showing a section through the sarcophagus and wrappings. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Tamut(06 of21)
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CT scan 3D visualization of Tamut's mummified remains, showing her body within the sarcophagus. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Tamut(07 of21)
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CT scan 3D visualization of Tamut's mummified remains, showing her skeleton and amulets. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Tamut(08 of21)
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CT scan of Tamut's feet reveals metal covers on her toenails and a large amulet of the winged scarab beetle Khepri. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Karnak(09 of21)
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The temple of Amun-Re at Karnak, where Tamut probably served as a priestess. (credit:Vandenbeusch)
Karnak(10 of21)
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The temple of Amun-Re at Karnak. (credit:Vandenbeusch)
Mummy of Tamut(11 of21)
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Members of the media stand around the Mummy of Tamut, a temple singer around 900 BC, during a press conference at the British Museum in London, Wednesday April 9, 2014. (credit:Associated Press)
Mummy of Tamut(12 of21)
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Members of the media stand around the Mummy of Tamut, a temple singer around 900 BC, during a press conference at the British Museum in London, Wednesday April 9, 2014. (credit:Associated Press)
Mummy of Tamut(13 of21)
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The Mummy of Tamut, a temple singer around 900 BC, is shown during a press conference at the British Museum in London, Wednesday April 9, 2014. (credit:Associated Press)
Mummy of Tamut(14 of21)
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The Mummy of Tamut, a temple singer around 900 BC, is shown during a press conference at the British Museum in London, Wednesday April 9, 2014. (credit:Associated Press)
Mummy of Adult Male(15 of21)
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Mummy of an adult male (aged 35 to older, name unknown), wrapped in linen bandages. Found at Thebes, 26th dynasty (c. 600 BC). (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Adult Man(16 of21)
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The CT scan of the skull of the mummy of an adult man (name unknown). The scan shows the remains of the brain (colored in blue) and evidence of a tool that was left in the skull as a mistake during the mummification process (in green). (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Adult Man(17 of21)
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The CT scan of the skull of the mummy of an adult man (name unknown). The scan shows considerable evidence of dental abbcesses and the loss of several teeth. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Adult Male(18 of21)
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The CT scan of the mummy of an adult male (name unknown), showing his mummified remains. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Adult Male(19 of21)
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The CT scan of the mummy of an adult male (name unknown), showing his skeleton. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Mummy of Adult Male(20 of21)
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The CT scan of the mummy of an adult male (name unknown), showing the surface of the wrappings. (credit:Trustees of the British Museum)
Theban Necropolis(21 of21)
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The Theban necropolis where the mummy of an adult male was discovered. (credit:Vandenbeusch )