Histotaphonomic analysis of bone bioerosion reveals a regional framework of diverse deathways in the Neolithic of Southeast Italy
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jats:pThe wide diversity of Neolithic funerary practices is increasingly recognised. In Southeast Italy, recent studies have drawn attention to the co-existence of multiple ways of treating the dead within single sites and across the region. In this study, we address how such diverse deathways form a regional framework of ritual practice through histotaphonomic analysis of bone bioerosion. Samples were obtained from articulated, semi-articulated and disarticulated remains from four sites in Apulia which each presented different modes of treatment and disposal of the dead. Bone thin sections were analysed by light microscopy to characterise microstructural preservation through features including bacterial bioerosion, staining, inclusions, and Wedl tunnelling. We investigate the early post-mortem histories of individuals whose remains ended up in various states of dis/articulation and diverse depositional contexts. Disarticulated remains frequently displayed arrested or extensive bacterial bioerosion, which was also found in articulated and semi-articulated skeletons. Additionally, remains deposited in similar contexts, as well as articulated and disarticulated remains deposited together in the same context, often showed different histotaphonomic characteristics, suggesting diverse early post-mortem trajectories. As a result, we argue that Neolithic deathways in southeastern Italy incorporated a high level of diversity in the early post-mortem treatment of the body. A framework for funerary practices emerges, whereby disarticulated remains probably originated from bodies which had been buried previously and subjected to varying extents of shelter, exposure to invertebrates, and duration of burial. However, we acknowledge the ongoing research into the origins of bacterial bioerosion and the problem of equifinality, which leaves open the possibility for further scenarios of early post-mortem treatment.</jats:p>
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Acknowledgements: JET would like to thank Dr. Petros Chatzimpaloglou, Dr. Michael Lewis, and Gian Battista Marras for the production of thin sections and assistance with microscopic analysis, and Biancamaria Bonucci and Martina Farese for assistance with R. We thank Prof. Cecilia Conati Barbaro for useful advice on the Masseria Candelaro material. The authors are grateful to the Soprintendenza Archeologia, Belle Arti e Paessagio (SABAP) per la Città Metropolitana di Bari for permission to analyse the Titolo remains, and SABAP per le Province di Barletta-Andria-Trani e Foggia for permission to analyse the Masseria Candelaro, Grotta Scaloria and Passo di Corvo remains. We are grateful to Francesco Sanseverino, Giuseppe Carbonara, Barbara De Liso and Francesca Frascolla for allowing us to use their illustrations from the Titolo excavations, which were carried out in collaboration with Michele Sicolo. We also wish to thank Dr. Francesca Candilio and Dr. Alessandra Sperduti from the Servizio di Bioarcheologia of the Museo delle Civiltà (Italian Ministry for Culture) for providing access to the Masseria Candelaro collection. We are particularly grateful to Dr. Donatella Pian for providing useful information on the Grotta Scaloria material.