Philippine archaeologists said Friday they had
discovered a thousand-year old cemetery of rock coffins in a
rainforest, but that tomb-raiders had found it decades earlier and
stolen precious artifacts.
The coffins are rectangular holes
carved into a limestone hill, a burial method documented only in two
other areas of eastern Asia, the leader of the National Museum's
archaeological dig, Eusebio Dizon said.
Dizon said local
officials informed the museum last year about the site, in a forest
about 200 kilometers (125 miles) southeast of Manila.
"(But) treasure hunters had been there before, in the 1960s and the 1970s, and a little bit in the 1980s," Dizon said.
"They would have taken metal and other implements to be sold, and thrown away the human remains since they had no use for them."
Forest
rangers have since secured the site, on the top of a hill called
Kamhantik, which is near a coconut plantation, according to Dizon.
He
said his team had cleaned at least 10 mostly empty coffins, measuring
two meters (6 feet, six inches) long, 50 centimeters (20 inches) wide
and about 40 centimeters (16 inches) deep.
Fragments of human
remains from one coffin were sent to a university in the United States
for carbon-dating, which confirmed the site as a 10th-century
settlement, he said.
More moss-covered coffins were found within
the 12-hectare (30-acre) area of forest, and they will be excavated when
funds become available, according to Dizon.
"There could be more items, artifacts showing how they lived," Dizon said.
Dizon
could not say if the rock-coffin people were migrants or long-time
residents who had learned the coffin-carving from outsiders.
Similar
stone coffins had also been found in Gilimanuk in the Indonesian
tourist island of Bali and some parts of Taiwan, he said.
But in both cases other types of rocks were used, with the Gilimanuk finds made of volcanic material, he added.
In
the Philippine graves, Dizon said the community was believed to have
used metal tools, maybe iron, to carve the holes into the limestone.
Other 10th-century residents of the islands used earthen jars and wood as coffins, he said.
The team also found evidence of houses being built atop the limestone.
Most
of the known human settlements in the islands at the time were on the
coasts, but the Kamhantik find was about six kilometers (three miles)
inland, he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment