STRANDLOPERS OP DE BRANDSTAPEL
Burnt bird bones have been discovered in two traces of cremation sites at the early medieval cemetery of Oosterbeintum (Fr.) (dated from 400 AD into the 8th century AD). The burnt bones are of Calidris minuta or Calidris temminckii, little stint or Temminck's stint, and of Calidris alpina, dun...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | Dutch |
Published: |
Groninger Instituut voor Archeologie
1991
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://ugp.rug.nl/Paleo-aktueel/article/view/36846 |
Summary: | Burnt bird bones have been discovered in two traces of cremation sites at the early medieval cemetery of Oosterbeintum (Fr.) (dated from 400 AD into the 8th century AD). The burnt bones are of Calidris minuta or Calidris temminckii, little stint or Temminck's stint, and of Calidris alpina, dunlin. Wing bones prevail by far. Most probably the stint and dunlin wing bones originate from wings that the dead person had worn attached to the clothes as a decoration. Another possibility is that the wings were given to the deceased on the pyre. It is historically known that dunlins and other birds were caught with nets on the mudflats in the vicinity of Oosterbeintum until the beginning of the 20th century. |
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