KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA—Live Science reports that prehistoric burials have been discovered in Malaysia’s Nenggiri Valley. Zuliskandar Ramli of the National University of Malaysia said that the remains of 16 individuals were recovered from 13 limestone caves at four different sites. Fifteen of the individuals were buried in a crouched position, indicating that they date to the pre-Neolithic period. The oldest of these remains have been dated to between 14,000 and 16,000 years ago. “This is the most complete and oldest skeleton in a fully flexed position found in the country,” Ramli said. One skeleton, found in an extended position, has been radiocarbon dated to the Neolithic period, some 6,000 years ago. More than 70,000 artifacts, including fragments of stone tools, pottery, and stone ornaments, were also recovered from the caves. Stone tools, red ochre, and crystals were found in the pre-Neolithic graves, Ramli added, while the Neolithic-period grave contained a stone bracelet, polished stone tools, and pottery. The sites will be flooded in 2027 as part of a hydroelectric project. To read about a recent discovery in Malaysia's Bujang Valley, go to "Around the World: Malaysia."
Prehistoric Burials Unearthed in Malaysia
News September 11, 2024
Recommended Articles
Features September/October 2025
Here Comes the Sun
On a small Danish island 5,000 years ago, farmers crafted tokens to bring the sun out of the shadows

Digs & Discoveries July/August 2025
Neolithic Neophytes

Letter from the Levant March/April 2025
On the Origin of the Pork Taboo
Exploring ancient people’s shifting beliefs about rearing and eating pigs

Features November/December 2024
Europe’s Lost Bronze Age Civilization
Archaeologists have discovered more than 100 previously unknown megasites north of the Danube

-
Features September/October 2024
Hunting for the Lost Temple of Artemis
After a century of searching, a chance discovery led archaeologists to one of the most important sanctuaries in the ancient Greek world
Courtesy Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece -
Features September/October 2024
Trees of the Sky World
Why Australia’s Indigenous Wiradjuri people carved sacred symbols into trees to mark burials of their honored dead
Courtesy Caroline Spry -
Features September/October 2024
The People Before the Book
A trove of papyri unearthed on the Egyptian island of Elephantine gives voice to an early Jewish community
Bildarchiv Steffens/Bridgeman Images -
Features September/October 2024
Pompeii Style
Inside the Roman houses where archaeologists continue to discover evocative new masterpieces
Courtesy Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei