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Ancients in southern China mummified their dead long before Egyptians: study

International research team finds evidence of preserved humans from 12,000 years ago across Southeast Asia

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Archaeologists believe ancient remains found at sites across southern China and neighbouring countries provide evidence of mummification. Photo: Handout
Dannie Pengin Beijing
Hunter-gatherers across southern China and Southeast Asia were preserving human remains thousands of years earlier than better-known examples of mummification from ancient Egypt, according to an international team of archaeologists.

In a study published on Monday by the US journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers said that large-scale mummification of human remains was practised in the region as early as 12,000 years ago.

An investigation of 54 pre-Neolithic burials from 11 archaeological sites across Southeast Asia confirmed that many of the bodies had been smoke-dried over a prolonged period, mostly in tightly bound, crouched postures, the study said.

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The samples, mainly from southern China, Vietnam and Indonesia, were far older than Chile’s Chinchorro mummies, dating back around 7,000 years, and the earliest known attempts at mummification in ancient Egypt from about 4,500 years ago, it said.

Taking part in the study were researchers from the Australian National University, Peking University, the University of Tokyo and the Guangxi Institute of Cultural Relics Protection and Archaeology.

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Between 20,000 and 4,000 years ago, before the spread of Neolithic populations ancestral to most living East and Southeast Asians, the region was inhabited by hunter-gatherers who followed a complex set of mortuary practices.

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