Taiwan finds 4,800-year-old fossil of mother cradling baby
4,800-year-old skeleton of a mother holding her six-month old child. She is believed to be an ancestor of the Austronesian peoples that spread across the Pacific. Taichung, Taiwan, Dapenkeng culture, 2800 BC
The 48 sets of remains unearthed in graves in the Taichung area are the earliest trace of human activity found in central Taiwan. The most striking discovery among them was the skeleton of a young mother looking down at a child cradled in her arms.
“When it was unearthed, all of the archaeologists and staff members were shocked. Why? Because the mother was looking down at the baby in her hands,” said Chu Whei-lee, a curator in the Anthropology Department at Taiwan’s National Museum of Natural Science.
The excavation of the site began in May 2014 and took a year to complete. Carbon dating was used to determine the ages of the fossils, which included five children.
Related Post
Breaking News: Intact Dinosaur Unearthed in the Amazon Jungle—A Groundbreaking Discovery
Stunning Discovery: 6,000-Year-Old Danish Burial Reveals Heart-Wrenching Mother and Baby Bond
Grisly Discovery: Female ‘Vampire’ Remains Found Pinioned with a Sickle Across Her Throat to Repel the Supernatural
Unearthing King Tut’s Footwear: The Hidden Stories of His 3,300-Year-Old Sandals, from Hidden Disabilities to Symbolic Enemies
Revealing the Shocking Secrets of Rome’s 5,500-Year-Old Giant Tomb: What the Ancient Enigma Exposes
Mysterious Find: 3-Fingered Mummified Hand Discovered in a Hidden Tunnel Beneath the Peruvian Desert—What Secrets Lie Within?