Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter

37 sets of remains in one jar solve Laos burial mystery

Share your love

  • Archaeologists found remains of at least 37 people — adults and a toddler — inside a massive stone jar in northern Laos, per a study published in Antiquity.sciencenews
  • Radiocarbon dating showed bones were deposited over roughly 270 years, from the 9th to 12th centuries, in a secondary burial ritual tied to ancestor worship.anthropology
  • DNA testing is now underway to determine how the individuals were related, which could further clarify the purpose of thousands of similar jars across the region.smithsonianmag

Ancient ‘Death Jar’ in Laos Found Packed With Remains of 37 People

Archaeologists working in northern Laos have discovered the remains of at least 37 people inside a single massive stone jar, offering the first direct evidence that the enigmatic vessels scattered across the country’s highlands were used as multigenerational communal burial sites. The findings, published May 18 in the journal Antiquity, shed new light on one of Southeast Asia’s most enduring archaeological mysteries.sciencenews

A Century-Old Puzzle

The Plain of Jars, located on the Xieng Khouang Plateau near the remote town of Phonsavan, contains thousands of giant stone jars — some weighing several tons — that have puzzled researchers since French archaeologist Madeleine Colani first studied them in the 1930s. While scholars long suspected the jars were connected to burial practices, no one had confirmed the theory with definitive physical evidence until now.newscientist

The jar in question, designated Jar 1 at Site 75, measures more than two meters across and sits in a forested area roughly 70 kilometers northeast of Phonsavan. Inside, researchers found right femurs and skulls from 19 individuals and teeth from 37 people, including adults and a child as young as 18 months old.smithsonianmag

Generations of the Dead

Radiocarbon dating of eight bone and tooth samples revealed that remains were deposited over a span of approximately 270 years, from around 890 to 1160 CE. The bones were disarticulated — meaning joints had already separated before placement in the jar — indicating this was a secondary burial practice. Lead researcher Louise Skopal and her team hypothesize that bodies were first placed in smaller jars found nearby, where flesh was allowed to decompose before cleaned bones were transferred to the larger communal vessel.anthropology

“The number of individuals also suggests the jars were owned by family or extended family groups,” Skopal noted. “They likely served as places where ancestral rites were performed over generations.”anthropology

Broader Implications

The discovery suggests that the thousands of similar stone jars across northern Laos likely served a comparable purpose, pointing to a vast ancient burial complex tied to ancestor worship. Some jars also contained ashes and burned bone fragments from cremations, a later Buddhist tradition, indicating the vessels may have been reused after Buddhism was introduced to the region. DNA testing is now underway to determine how the individuals were related to one another.smithsonianmag

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay informed and not overwhelmed, subscribe now!