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While the grave has several small pits, other graves are
While the grave has several small pits, other graves are clustered around the edges of the pits. In some of these, buried graves may have been carved out by the same group of people, which the researchers speculate may have been the descendants of the village's most recent and oldest members.
The graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site are most likely those of three young children buried in the same grave between 2,300 and 4,000 years ago.
The researchers estimate that at least 500 to 600 people died at the grave site in a single day, the oldest in the region. They also suggest that at least 300 or more people were at the site during one day.
In order to determine the exact date of death, the team carried out a second survey of the graves. They collected detailed radiocarbon dating and computed the date of death using a radiocarbon bomb that measured the presence of the remains.
The results suggest that the graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site were built to cope with the changing cultural climate. They also suggest that the graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site may have been constructed to cope with the changing cultural environment.
They also suggest that the graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site may have been constructed to cope with the changing cultural environment.
They also point out that the graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site may have been built to cope with the changing cultural environment.
However, it is likely that the graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site may have been built to cope with the changing cultural environment.
Hildebrand believes that the graves at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site may have been built to cope with the changing cultural environment.
"If you're not able to find an area where you can dig down, you don't know where to dig in," she said. "Now you have a whole range of things to do and you can't know where to dig." Hildebrand points to the grave at the centre of the Lothagam North Pillar site as evidence for the fact that the people at the center of the Lothagam North Pillar site were living in a different social context than the villagers living there.
"This is the first time that radiocarbon dating has been able to tell what was going on in one place," explained Hildebrand.
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