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His killed me as a pre-punk boy. Like some free-reed instrument, it glowed more than pushed, transmitting a longing I couldn t yet name. Was the sweetest on KWFM radio in Tucson in the mid 70s. That voice sidled up swimmingly next to his male-peer stars, like the velvet country-rock throats of John Dawson (New Riders of The Purple Sage) and Jackson Browne, especially on the song of isolation The Story, a tune filled of songwriterly flourishes, raw violin and a foreshadowing narrative so great it transcended any potentialities as a formal radio song, yet there it was on free-form KWFM, regularly:
20,000-Year-Old Woman Burned In Fiery Death Ritual
The burnt remains of a woman discovered in an ancient Jordanian hunters’ camp have been dated to almost 20,000 years ago. And having been partially incinerated in an obscure death ritual, this discovery demonstrates beliefs towards death shifted much earlier than currently believed.
A New Kind Of Death Ritual And Much Earlier Than We Thought
Until now, in the Middle East , the burial of people and cremated remains within living structures is thought to have originated no earlier than about 10,000 years ago in the Neolithic period.
However, the discovery of the woman s charred remains, in a seasonal campsite hut, informed scientists that Middle Eastern hunter-gatherers had adopted new views on death nearly 20,000 years ago.
Funeral Practice Pushed Back in Middle East Some 9,000 Years
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA Hunter-gatherers in the Middle East linked the death of a person and the destruction of a building some 10,000 years earlier than previously thought, according to a
Science Newsreport. It had been previously thought that early farmers in the region were the first to place their dead in or under burned houses. Archaeologists Lisa Maher of the University of California, Berkeley, and Danielle Macdonald of the University of Tulsa and their colleagues uncovered a hunter-gatherer woman’s partial charred skeleton in eastern Jordan at a hunting and trading site known as Kharaneh IV. She had been placed on her side, with knees flexed, inside a brushwood structure. Traces of this structure were identified as an outline of sediments rich in charcoal and ash, and these borders suggest the fire was intentional and contained to the solitary structure, Maher explained. Radioca
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