
Blackened Teeth, Jaw Surgery, and Ancient Knitting - TAS 324
This week we are back with some News stories! First, we discuss evidence from an Iron Age cemetery in northern Vietnam showing intentional, permanent tooth blackening dating back 2,000 years. Then, we cover a 2,500-year-old Pazyryk culture burial in southern Siberia where CT scans of a mummified woman’s skull suggest a severe jaw injury was stabilized with surgical sutures. And finally, we summarize Bronze Age textile finds from Anatolia dated roughly 1915–1745 BCE and later, including the earliest regional evidence of nalbinding (single-needle “knitting”) and an indigo-dyed hemp fragment identified as the oldest known blue-dyed textile in Bronze Age Anatolia.
Links
- 2,000-year-old skulls reveal people in ancient Vietnam permanently blackened their teeth — a stylish practice that persists today
- Iron Age Surgeons Fixed a Woman's Shattered Jaw With Primitive Prosthetic—and She Survived
- Earliest evidence of indigo-dyed textiles and single-needle knitting discovered in Bronze Age Anatolia
- Untwisting Beycesultan Höyük: the earliest evidence for nålbinding and indigo-dyed textiles in Anatolia
Contact
Chris Webster
Rachel Roden
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