NOVOSIBIRSK, RUSSIA—According to a report in The Siberian Times, a figurine that appears to be wearing a feathered headdress has been discovered at an approximately 5,000-year-old site near the Ob River in western Siberia. Archaeologist Natalia Basova said the unusual artifact was found along with a bird carved from bone that was probably sewn onto clothing or worn as a pendant, and several anthropomorphic figurines, also equipped with holes, made of mammoth tusk, sandstone, birch burl, and an organic material that has not yet been identified. A moose figurine, made of shale, was also recovered. The site was disturbed by an earthquake and tsunami wave some 4,000 years ago, and by a potato farm in the modern era. To read about another recent discover in Russia, go to “Arctic Ice Maiden.”
Unusual Artifacts Recovered in Russia
News October 23, 2017
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
© Sisse Brimberg/GEO Image Collection/Bridgeman Images
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2022
Membership Has Its Privileges
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2021
Face Off
(Photograph © The State Hermitage Museum/Photo by Vladimir Terebenin)
Ancient Tattoos November/December 2013
Iron Age Mummy
(The State Hermitage Museum)
-
Features September/October 2017
Painted Worlds
Searching for the meaning of self-expression in the land of the Moche
(Courtesy Lisa Trever) -
Letter from California September/October 2017
The Ancient Ecology of Fire
Lessons emerge from the ways in which North American hunter-gatherers managed the landscape around them
(Justin Sullivan / Gettyimages) -
Artifacts September/October 2017
Gilded Copper Color Disc
(Courtesy Illinois State Military Museum) -
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2017
White Horse of the Sun
(Skyscan Photolibrary / Alamy)