Page 4 - Mohammad Javad Shoaee News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from Mohammad javad shoaee. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In Mohammad Javad Shoaee Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Child's grave is the oldest human burial found in Africa


Child’s grave is the oldest human burial found in Africa
Jamie Shreeve
© Photograph by María Martinón-Torres, National Research Center on Human Evolution (CENIEH)
After months of painstaking cleaning of the remains in the lab, scientists uncovered the child s skull. This view shows the left side with the jawbone intact including two unerupted teeth with unformed roots. The teeth dates the child to 2.5-3 years of age. The deliberate burial of the young child, named ‘Mtoto’ (‘child’ in Swahili), dated to around 78,000 years ago, in a cave in Kenya is the earliest known evidence of funerary internment by modern humans in Africa. ....

South Africa , Nairobi Area , City Of , United Kingdom , Castillay Leóp , Mohammad Javad Shoaee , Helena Santos , Michael Petraglia , Jorge Gonz , Emmanuel Ndiema , Paul Pettitt , Taramsa Hill , Los Huesos , Chris Stringer , National Museum , University Of South Florida , Max Planck Institute In Jena , National Research Center On Human Evolution , Durham University , University Complutense , Natural History Museum , National Museums Of Kenya , Max Planck Institute , National Research Center , Human Evolution , Middle East ,

How giant snails helped confirm the oldest human burial in Africa


How giant snails helped confirm the oldest human burial in Africa
We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
Dismiss
Normal text size
Advertisement
Researchers have confirmed the oldest human burial site discovered in Africa, piecing the find together through painstaking work involving meticulous archaeological methods, intricate computer modelling, and the shells of giant snails.
A child, aged between two and three years old, was carefully laid to rest in a cave which today is known as Panga ya Saidi, on the Kenyan coast.
An artist’s impression of the child, nicknamed “Mtoto”, meaning “child” in Swahili. ....

South Africa , New South Wales , Mohammad Javad Shoaee , Patrick Faulkner , University Of Sydney , Mohammad Javad , புதியது தெற்கு வேல்ஸ் , பேட்ரிக் ஃபால்க்னர் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் சிட்னி , முகமது ஜாவத் ,

The Earliest Human Burial in Africa - The New York Times


Child’s Grave Is Earliest Known Burial Site in Africa
A child laid to rest in 78,000 years ago, yields clues to early human burials in East Africa.
A virtual ideal reconstruction of the burial position of Mtoto, a 3-year-old boy buried 78,000 years ago.Credit.Jorge González/Elena Santos
May 5, 2021, 11:48 a.m. ET
Researchers have identified the earliest known human burial in Africa at Panga ya Saidi, a cave near the Kenyan coast. A child, probably a boy of about 2-1/2 to 3 years old, was placed in a pit about 78,000 years ago, laid carefully on his side, curled up, likely with some kind of pillow under his head. ....

South Africa , Mohammad Javad Shoaee , Maria Martinon Torres , Middle East , National Research Center , Human Evolution , Mohammad Javad , Archaeology Anthropology , Nature Journal , Your Feed Science , நடுத்தர கிழக்கு , தேசிய ஆராய்ச்சி மையம் , மனிதன் பரிணாமம் , முகமது ஜாவத் , தொல்பொருள் மானுடவியல் , இறுதிச் சடங்குகள் , இயற்கை இதழ் , உங்கள் தீவனம் அறிவியல் ,

Oldest human burial in Kenya -- Secret History -- Sott.net


A new study featured on the 6 May cover of
Nature by an international team of researchers details the
earliest modern human burial in Africa. The remains of a 2.5 to 3 year-old child were found in a flexed position, deliberately buried in a shallow grave directly under the sheltered overhang of the cave. The interment at Panga ya Saidi joins increasing evidence of early complex social behaviours in
Homo sapiens.
© Mohammad Javad Shoaee
General view of the cave site of Panga ya Saidi. Note trench excavation where burial was unearthed.Despite being home to the earliest signs of modern human behaviour,
early evidence of burials in Africa are scarce and often ambiguous. Therefore, little is known about the origin and development of mortuary practices in the continent of our species birth. A child buried at the mouth of the Panga ya Saidi cave site 78,000 years ago is changing that, revealing how Middle Stone Age populations interacted with the dead. ....

Nairobi Area , Mohammad Javad Shoaee , Michael Petraglia , Jorge Gonz , Emmanuel Ndiema , Nicole Boivin , National Museum , Max Planck Institute In Jena , National Research Center On Human Evolution , Department Of Archaeology , National Museums Of Kenya Nairobi , National Museums Of Kenya , Middle Stone Age , Max Planck Institute , Human History , National Museums , Professor Nicole Boivin , East African , National Research Center , Human Evolution , Professor Mar , Helena Santos , Stone Age , African Middle Stone Age , Professor Michael Petraglia , நைரோபி பரப்பளவு ,