Darra-e Kur

Darra-e Kur
Darra-e Kur rock shelter
location in Afghanistan
Alternate name Bābā Darwīsh; Cave of the Valley; Darra-i-Kur[1]
Location northeast of Kalafgān near the village of Chinār-i Gunjus Khān
Region Badakhshan province, Afghanistan
Coordinates 36°47′N 70°00′E / 36.783°N 70.000°E / 36.783; 70.000Coordinates: 36°47′N 70°00′E / 36.783°N 70.000°E / 36.783; 70.000
Type rock shelter
Site notes
Excavation dates 1966
Archaeologists Louis Dupree

Darra-e Kūr or Bābā Darwīsh, is an archaeological site in Badakhshan province in Afghanistan. It is situated just northeast of Kalafgān near the village of Chinār-i Gunjus Khān 63 km (39.1 mi) east of Taloqan, on the road to Faizabad. The cave is situated atop the side of the valley near the hamlet of Bābā Darwīsh.

Description

Darra-e Kūr is a rock shelter, well-stratified in silt deposits, laid down by a stream. Approximately 800 stone implements were recovered, of two basic types: flint and sickle blades, and large diabase points. Other finds included celts, scrapers, pounders, blades, simple jewelry, fauna, such as fish, rodents, wild horse, domesticated sheep and goat and onager, a fragment of a human right temporal bone, many bone fossils and three fragments of tin and bronze. Unearthed pottery was mostly crude, black wares, sometimes decorated. The only architectural traces found were 80 post-holes, suggestive of tents. Three articulated goat burials were discovered.[2]

Collection:

Field-work:

Dating

The Mousterian artefacts come from a layer that was dated to around 30,000 BP. One of the younger layers above, referred to by the site archaeologists as coming from a "Goat Cult" Neolithic layer, was dated to around 3780 BP.[1]

Direct AMS dating of the temporal bone (NMNH 387961) reveals that the bone is a lot younger than previously thought, giving an age range of around 4530-4410 BP. Previously thought to have been from the Paleolithic, due to the presence of the bone among the layer containing Mousterian Levallois artefacts, direct dating has revealed that the bone is actually from the Neolithic. Researchers now believe that the temporal bone came from a later burial that intruded into the Mousterian layer, likely coming from the culture associated with the "Goat Cult" Neolithic layer.[1]

Archaeogenetics

In 2017, researchers successfully extracted the DNA from both the petrous and squamous part of the Darra-e Kur temporal bone. The Darra-e Kur specimen is the first ancient human remain from Afghanistan from which DNA has been successfully sequenced. The individual was found to belong to Haplogroup H2a.[1]

References

Citations

Bibliography

  • Douka, Katerina; Slon, Viviane; Stringer, Chris; Potts, Richard; Hübner, Alexander; Meyer, Matthias; Spoor, Fred; Pääbo, Svante; Higham, Tom (2017). "Direct radiocarbon dating and DNA analysis of the Darra-i-Kur (Afghanistan) human temporal bone". Journal of Human Evolution. 107: 86–93. ISSN 0047-2484. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2017.03.003. 
  • Hawks, John (2010-07-01). "The Darra-i-Kur temporal bone". john hawks weblog. Retrieved 2017-05-05. 

Further reading

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