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Mal'ta–Buret' culture

The Mal'ta–Buret' culture (also Maltinsko-buretskaya culture) is an archaeological culture of the Upper Paleolithic (generally dated to 24,000-23,000 BP but also sometimes to 15,000 BP).[5] It is located roughly northwest of Lake Baikal, about 90km to the northwest of Irkutsk, on the banks of the upper Angara River.

Mal'ta–Buret' culture
Location of Mal'ta–Buret'
Geographical rangeIrkutsk Oblast, Siberia, Russian Federation
PeriodUpper Paleolithic
Dates24,000–15,000 BP
Type siteSite of Mal'ta (52°51′00″N 103°31′03″E / 52.850045°N 103.517383°E / 52.850045; 103.517383)[1]
Site of Buret' (approx. 53°00′10″N 103°30′31″E / 53.002647°N 103.508696°E / 53.002647; 103.508696)
Preceded byMousterian (Denisova Cave)[2]
Aurignacian?
Followed byAfontova Gora
Engraving of a mammoth on a slab of mammoth ivory, from the Upper Paleolithic Mal'ta deposits at Lake Baikal, Siberia.[3][4]

The type sites are named for the villages of Mal'ta (Мальта́), Usolsky District and Buret' (Буре́ть), Bokhansky District (both in Irkutsk Oblast).

A boy whose remains were found near Mal'ta is usually known by the abbreviation MA-1 (or MA1). Discovered in the 1920s, the remains have been dated to 24,000 BP. According to research published since 2013, MA-1 belonged to the population of Ancient North Eurasians, who were genetically "intermediate between modern western Eurasians and Native Americans, but distant from east Asians",[6] and partial genetic ancestors of Siberians, American Indians, and Bronze Age Yamnaya and Botai[7] people of the Eurasian steppe.[8][9] In particular, modern-day Native Americans, Kets, Mansi, and Selkup have been found to harbour a significant amount of ancestry related to MA-1.[10]

Much of what is known about Mal'ta comes from the Russian archaeologist Mikhail Gerasimov. Better known later for his contribution to the branch of anthropology known as forensic facial reconstruction, Gerasimov made revolutionary discoveries when he excavated Mal'ta in 1927. Until his findings, the Upper Paleolithic societies of Northern Asia were virtually unknown. Over the remainder of his career, Gerasimov twice more visited Mal'ta to excavate and research the site.

Material culture edit

Habitation and tools edit

 
The Mal'ta-Buret' people lived in dwellings built of mammoth bones, similar to those found in Upper Paleolithic Europe.[11]

Mal'ta consists of semi-subterranean houses that were built using large animal bones to assemble the walls, and reindeer antlers covered with animal skins to construct a roof that would protect the inhabitants from the harsh elements of the Siberian weather.[12] These dwellings built from mammoth bones were similar to those found in Upper Paleolithic Western Eurasia, such as in the areas of France, Czechoslovakia, and Ukraine.[11]

 
Malta artefacts, Moscow State Historical Museum.

Evidence seems to indicate that Mal'ta is the most ancient known site in eastern Siberia, with the nearby site of Buret'.[12][13] However, relative dating illustrates some irregularities. The use of flint flaking and the absence of pressure flaking used in the manufacture of tools, as well as the continued use of earlier forms of tools, seem to confirm the fact that the site belongs to the early Upper Paleolithic. Yet it lacks typical skreblos (large side scrapers) that are common in other Siberian Paleolithic sites. Additionally, other common characteristics such as pebble cores, wedge-shaped cores, burins, and composite tools have never been found. The lack of these features, combined with an art style found in only one other nearby site (the Venus of Buret'), make Mal'ta culture unique in Siberia.

Art edit

There were two main types of art during the Upper Paleolithic: mural art, which was concentrated in Western Europe, and portable art. Portable art, typically some type of carving in ivory tusk or antler, spans the distance across Western Europe into Northern and Central Asia. Artistic remains of expertly carved bone, ivory, and antler objects depicting birds and human females are the most commonly found; these objects are, collectively, the primary source of Mal'ta's acclaim.[12]

In addition to the female statuettes there are bird sculptures depicting swans, geese, and ducks. Through ethnographic analogy comparing the ivory objects and burials at Mal'ta with objects used by 19th and 20th-century Siberian shamans, it has been suggested that they are evidence of a fully developed shamanism.

Also, there are engraved representations on slabs of mammoth tusk. One is the figure of a mammoth, easily recognizable by the trunk, tusks, and thick legs. Wool also seems to be etched, by the placement of straight lines along the body. Another drawing depicts three snakes with their heads puffed up and turned to the side. It is believed that they were similar to cobras.

Venus figurines edit

 
Mal'ta burials, artifacts and statuettes.[14]
Hooded clothed figurines
 
 
Hooded clothed figurines with decorative stripes, ivory, from Mal'ta No. 13 (left),[15][16] Mal'ta No. 27 (center),[17][16] and Buret' (right).[18][19]

Perhaps the best example of Paleolithic portable art is something referred to as "Venus figurines".[12] The Mal'ta boy (dated 24,000 BP) was buried with various artefacts and a Venus figurine.[20] Until they were discovered in Mal'ta, "Venus figurines" were previously found only in Europe.[12] Carved from the ivory tusk of a mammoth, these images were typically highly stylized, and often involved embellished and disproportionate characteristics (typically the breasts or buttocks). It is widely believed that these emphasized features were meant to be symbols of fertility. Around thirty female statuettes of varying shapes have been found in Mal'ta. The wide variety of forms, combined with the realism of the sculptures and the lack of repetitiveness in detail, are definite signs of developed, albeit early, art.

At first glance, what is obvious is that the Mal'ta Venus figurines are of two types: full-figured women with exaggerated forms, and women with a thin, delicate form. Some of the figures are nude, while others have etchings that seem to indicate fur or clothing. Conversely, unlike those found in Europe, some of the Venus figurines from Mal'ta were sculpted with faces. Most of the figurines were tapered at the bottom, and it is believed that this was done to enable them to be stuck into the ground or otherwise placed upright. Placed upright, they could have symbolized the spirits of the dead, akin to "spirit dolls" used nearly worldwide, including in Siberia, among contemporary people.

Context of the Venus figurines edit
 
A replica of the Venus figurine of Mal'ta discovered with the remains of the Mal'ta boy (MA-1, dated 24,000 BP).[21][22]

The Mal'ta figurines garner interest in the western world because they seem to be of the same basic form as European female figurines of roughly the same time period, suggestion some cultural and cultic connection.[12] This similarity between Mal'ta and Upper Paleolithic Europe coincides with other suggested similarities between the two, such as in their tools and dwelling structures.

A 2016 genomic study shows that the Mal'ta people have no genetic connections to the Dolní Věstonice people from the Gravettian culture. The researchers conclude that the similarity between the figurines may be either due to cultural diffusion or to a coincidence, but not to common ancestry between the populations.[23]

Symbolism edit

 
 
An ivory plaque (front and back) with circular marks, and three snakes[16]

Discussing this easternmost outpost of paleolithic culture, Joseph Campbell finishes by commenting on the symbolic forms of the artifacts found there:

We are clearly in a paleolithic province where the serpent, labyrinth, and rebirth themes already constitute a symbolic constellation, joined with the imagery of the sunbird and shaman flight, with the goddess in her classic role of protectress of the hearth, mother of man's second birth, and lady of wild things and of the food supply.[24]

Archaeogenetics edit

MA-1 is the only known example of basal Y-DNA R* (R-M207*) – that is, the only member of haplogroup R* that did not belong to haplogroups R1, R2 or secondary subclades of these. The mitochondrial DNA of MA-1 belonged to an unresolved subclade of haplogroup U.[25]

The remains of the Mal'ta boy (MA-1) are currently in the Hermitage Museum (Saint-Petersburg).

The term Ancient North Eurasian (ANE) has been given in genetic literature to an ancestral component that represents descent from the people similar to the Mal'ta–Buret' culture and the closely related population of Afontova Gora.[10][27]

A people similar to MA1 and Afontova Gora were important genetic contributors to Native Americans, Siberians, Europeans, Caucasians, Central Asians, with smaller contributions to Middle Easterners and some East Asians.[28] Lazaridis et al. (2016) notes "a cline of ANE ancestry across the east-west extent of Eurasia."[28] The "ANE-cline", as observed among Paleolithic Siberian populations and their direct descendants, developed from a sister lineage of Europeans with significant admixture from early East Asians.[29][30]

MA1 is also related to two older Upper Paleolithic Siberian individuals found at the Yana Rhinoceros Horn Site called Ancient North Siberians (ANS).[31]

 
Genetic proximity of Mal'ta to other Ancient North Eurasian populations (Yana and Afontova Gora), but also to Ust-Ishim, Sunghir and European populations, within a principal component analysis of ancient and present-day individuals from worldwide populations.[32]
 
Mal'ta Ancient North Eurasian population within a maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree.[32]
 
The "Ancient North Eurasian" (ANE) network, corresponding to the Mal'ta–Buret' and the closely-related Afontova Gora cultures, contributed ancestry towards later Eastern European Hunter-Gatherers (EHG) and Native Americans, as well as indirectly towards later Steppe pastoralists (specifically the Yamnaya culture).[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Lbova, Liudmila (2021). "The Siberian Palaeolithic Site of Mal'ta: A Unique Source for The Study of Childhood Archaeology". Evolutionary Human Sciences: Fig. 1-3.
  2. ^ Fagan, Brian M. (5 December 1996). The Oxford Companion to Archaeology. Oxford University Press. p. 644. ISBN 978-0-19-977121-9.
  3. ^ "Plate with the image of mammoth". Art of Mal'ta. Novosibirsk State University.
  4. ^ The mammoth engraving is item 37 in this inventory
  5. ^ Bednarik, Robert G. (2013). "Pleistocene Palaeoart of Asia". Arts. 2 (2): 48. doi:10.3390/arts2020046.
  6. ^ Raghavan, Maanasa (2014). "Upper Palaeolithic Siberian genome reveals dual ancestry of Native Americans". Nature. 505 (7481): 87–91. Bibcode:2014Natur.505...87R. doi:10.1038/nature12736. PMC 4105016. PMID 24256729. In the first two principal components, MA-1 is intermediate between modern western Eurasians and Native Americans, but distant from east Asians
  7. ^ a b Jeong, Choongwon; Balanovsky, Oleg; Lukianova, Elena; Kahbatkyzy, Nurzhibek; Flegontov, Pavel; Zaporozhchenko, Valery; Immel, Alexander; Wang, Chuan-Chao; Ixan, Olzhas; Khussainova, Elmira; Bekmanov, Bakhytzhan; Zaibert, Victor; Lavryashina, Maria; Pocheshkhova, Elvira; Yusupov, Yuldash; Agdzhoyan, Anastasiya; Sergey, Koshel; Bukin, Andrei; Nymadawa, Pagbajabyn; Churnosov, Michail; Skhalyakho, Roza; Daragan, Denis; Bogunov, Yuri; Bogunova, Anna; Shtrunov, Alexandr; Dubova, Nadezda; Zhabagin, Maxat; Yepiskoposyan, Levon; Churakov, Vladimir; Pislegin, Nikolay; Damba, Larissa; Saroyants, Ludmila; Dibirova, Khadizhat; Artamentova, Lubov; Utevska, Olga; Idrisov, Eldar; Kamenshchikova, Evgeniya; Evseeva, Irina; Metspalu, Mait; Robbeets, Martine; Djansugurova, Leyla; Balanovska, Elena; Schiffels, Stephan; Haak, Wolfgang; Reich, David; Krause, Johannes (23 May 2018). "Characterizing the genetic history of admixture across inner Eurasia". bioRxiv 10.1101/327122. Ancient DNA studies have already shown that human populations of this region have dramatically transformed over time. For example, the Upper Paleolithic genomes from the Mal'ta and Afontova Gora archaeological sites in southern Siberia revealed a genetic profile, often referred to as "Ancient North Eurasians (ANE)", which is deeply related to Paleolithic/Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in Europe and also substantially contributed to the gene pools of modern-day Native Americans, Siberians, Europeans and South Asians.
  8. ^ Raghavan & Skoglund et al. 2014.
  9. ^ Haak & Lazaridis et al. 2015.
  10. ^ a b Flegontov & Changmai et al. 2015.
  11. ^ a b Dolitsky, Alexander B.; Ackerman, Robert E.; Aigner, Jean S.; Bryan, Alan L.; Dennell, Robin; Guthrie, R. Dale; Hoffecker, John F.; Hopkins, David M.; Lanata, José Luis; Workman, William B. (1985). "Siberian Paleolithic Archaeology: Approaches and Analytic Methods [and Comments and Replies]". Current Anthropology. 26 (3): 361–378. doi:10.1086/203280. ISSN 0011-3204. JSTOR 2742734. S2CID 147371671. The Upper Paleolithic inhabitants of the European region spanned by France, Czechoslovakia, and the Ukraine led a hunting life resembling that of the people of Mal'ta and Buret' and built similar dwellings of matching construction from the bones of extinct large mammals
  12. ^ a b c d e f Tedesco, Laura Anne. "Mal'ta (ca. 20,000 B.C.)". The Met’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  13. ^ Karen Diane Jennett (May 2008). "Female Figurines of the Upper Paleolithic" (PDF). Texas State University. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
  14. ^ Lbova, Liudmila (2021). "The Siberian Palaeolithic Site of Mal'ta: A Unique Source for The Study of Childhood Archaeology". Evolutionary Human Sciences. 3. doi:10.1017/ehs.2021.5. PMC 10427291. S2CID 231980510.
  15. ^ Photograph: "Miniature sculpture of a teenager in overalls". Art of Mal'ta. Novosibirsk State University.
  16. ^ a b c Bednarik, Robert G. (2013). "Pleistocene Palaeoart of Asia". Arts. 2 (2): 46-76. doi:10.3390/arts2020046.
  17. ^ Photograph: "Figurine of dressed teenager". Art of Mal'ta. Novosibirsk State University.
  18. ^ Photograph: "Anthropomphic figurine (Buret')". Art of Mal'ta. Novosibirsk State University.
  19. ^ [1]
  20. ^ "Ancient DNA from Siberian boy links Europe and America". BBC News. 20 November 2013.
  21. ^ "Ancient DNA from Siberian boy links Europe and America". BBC News. 20 November 2013.
  22. ^ Lbova, Liudmila; Volkov, Pavel (1 June 2016). "Processing technology for the objects of mobile art in the Upper Paleolithic of Siberia (the Malta site)". Quaternary International. 403: 17. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2015.10.019. ISSN 1040-6182.
  23. ^ Fu, Qiaomei; Posth, Cosimo; et al. (May 2, 2016). "The genetic history of Ice Age Europe". Nature. 504 (7606): 200–5. Bibcode:2016Natur.534..200F. doi:10.1038/nature17993. hdl:10211.3/198594. PMC 4943878. PMID 27135931.
  24. ^ Campbell, Joseph (1987). Primitive Mythology. pp. 331. ISBN 0-14-019443-6.
  25. ^ Raghavan, Maanasa; Skoglund, Pontus; Graf, Kelly E.; Metspalu, Mait; Albrechtsen, Anders; Moltke, Ida; Rasmussen, Simon; Stafford Jr, Thomas W.; Orlando, Ludovic; Metspalu, Ene; Karmin, Monika; Tambets, Kristiina; Rootsi, Siiri; Mägi, Reedik; Campos, Paula F.; Balanovska, Elena; Balanovsky, Oleg; Khusnutdinova, Elza; Litvinov, Sergey; Osipova, Ludmila P.; Fedorova, Sardana A.; Voevoda, Mikhail I.; DeGiorgio, Michael; Sicheritz-Ponten, Thomas; Brunak, Søren; Demeshchenko, Svetlana; Kivisild, Toomas; Villems, Richard; Nielsen, Rasmus; Jakobsson, Mattias; Willerslev, Eske (January 2014). "Upper Palaeolithic Siberian genome reveals dual ancestry of Native Americans". Nature. 505 (7481): 87–91. Bibcode:2014Natur.505...87R. doi:10.1038/nature12736. PMC 4105016. PMID 24256729.
  26. ^ Lbova, Liudmila (2021). "The Siberian Paleolithic site of Mal'ta: a unique source for the study of childhood archaeology". Evolutionary Human Sciences. 3: 8, Fig. 6-1. doi:10.1017/ehs.2021.5. S2CID 231980510.
  27. ^ Lazaridis, Iosif; Nadel, Dani; Rollefson, Gary; et al. (16 June 2016). "Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the ancient Near East". Nature. 536 (7617): 419–424. Bibcode:2016Natur.536..419L. bioRxiv 10.1101/059311. doi:10.1038/nature19310. PMC 5003663. PMID 27459054.
  28. ^ a b Lazaridis et al. 2016, p. 10.
  29. ^ Vallini et al. 2022, Supplementary Information, p. 17: "Paleolithic Siberian populations younger than 40 ky are consistently described as a mix of European and East Asian ancestries".
  30. ^ Villalba-Mouco, Vanessa; van de Loosdrecht, Marieke S.; Rohrlach, Adam B.; Fewlass, Helen; Talamo, Sahra; Yu, He; Aron, Franziska; Lalueza-Fox, Carles; Cabello, Lidia; Cantalejo Duarte, Pedro; Ramos-Muñoz, José; Posth, Cosimo; Krause, Johannes; Weniger, Gerd-Christian; Haak, Wolfgang (2023-03-01). "A 23,000-year-old southern Iberian individual links human groups that lived in Western Europe before and after the Last Glacial Maximum". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 7 (4): 597–609. doi:10.1038/s41559-023-01987-0. ISSN 2397-334X. PMC 10089921. PMID 36859553. This is because the ancestry found in Mal'ta and Afontova Gora individuals (Ancient North Eurasian ancestry) received ancestry from UP East Asian/Southeast Asian populations54, who then contributed substantially to EHG55.
  31. ^ Sikora, Martin; Pitulko, Vladimir V.; Sousa, Vitor C.; Allentoft, Morten E.; Vinner, Lasse; Rasmussen, Simon; Margaryan, Ashot; de Barros Damgaard, Peter; de la Fuente, Constanza; Renaud, Gabriel; Yang, Melinda A.; Fu, Qiaomei; Dupanloup, Isabelle; Giampoudakis, Konstantinos; Nogués-Bravo, David; Rahbek, Carsten; Kroonen, Guus; Peyrot, Michaël; McColl, Hugh; Vasilyev, Sergey V.; Veselovskaya, Elizaveta; Gerasimova, Margarita; Pavlova, Elena Y.; Chasnyk, Vyacheslav G.; Nikolskiy, Pavel A.; Gromov, Andrei V.; Khartanovich, Valeriy I.; Moiseyev, Vyacheslav; Grebenyuk, Pavel S.; Fedorchenko, Alexander Yu; Lebedintsev, Alexander I.; Slobodin, Sergey B.; Malyarchuk, Boris A.; Martiniano, Rui; Meldgaard, Morten; Arppe, Laura; Palo, Jukka U.; Sundell, Tarja; Mannermaa, Kristiina; Putkonen, Mikko; Alexandersen, Verner; Primeau, Charlotte; Baimukhanov, Nurbol; Malhi, Ripan S.; Sjögren, Karl-Göran; Kristiansen, Kristian; Wessman, Anna; Sajantila, Antti; Lahr, Marta Mirazon; Durbin, Richard; Nielsen, Rasmus; Meltzer, David J.; Excoffier, Laurent; Willerslev, Eske (June 2019). "The population history of northeastern Siberia since the Pleistocene" (PDF). Nature. 570 (7760): 182–188. Bibcode:2019Natur.570..182S. doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1279-z. PMID 31168093. S2CID 174809069.
  32. ^ a b Gakuhari, Takashi; Nakagome, Shigeki; Rasmussen, Simon; Allentoft, Morten E. (25 August 2020). "Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations". Communications Biology. 3 (1): Fig.1 A, B. doi:10.1038/s42003-020-01162-2. ISSN 2399-3642. PMC 7447786. PMID 32843717.

Bibliography edit

 
Excavation site of the Mal'ta–Buret' culture (red dot) on the banks of the Angara River, about 150 km from Lake Baikal.
  • Bednarik, Robert G. (1994). "The Pleistocene Art of Asia". Journal of World Prehistory. 8 (4): 351–75. doi:10.1007/bf02221090. S2CID 161683955.
  • Chard, Chester S. (1974). Northeast Asia in Prehistory. Madison, WI: The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 9780299064303.
  • Dolitsky, A.B.; Ackerman. R.E.; et al. (1985). "Siberian Paleolithic Archaeology: Approaches and Analytic Methods". Current Anthropology. 26 (3): 361–78. doi:10.1086/203280. S2CID 147371671.
  • Flegontov, Pavel; Changmai, Piya; et al. (Feb 11, 2016). "Genomic study of the Ket: a Paleo-Eskimo-related ethnic group with significant ancient North Eurasian ancestry". Scientific Reports. 6: 20768. arXiv:1508.03097. Bibcode:2016NatSR...620768F. doi:10.1038/srep20768. PMC 4750364. PMID 26865217.
  • Haak, W.; Lazaridis, I.; et al. (2015). "Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in Europe". Nature. 522 (7555): 207–11. arXiv:1502.02783. Bibcode:2015Natur.522..207H. doi:10.1038/nature14317. PMC 5048219. PMID 25731166.
  • Jones, Eppie R.; Gonzalez-Fortes, Gloria; et al. (2015). "Upper Palaeolithic genomes reveal deep roots of modern Eurasians". Nature Communications. 6: 8912. Bibcode:2015NatCo...6.8912J. doi:10.1038/ncomms9912. PMC 4660371. PMID 26567969.
  • Lazaridis, Iosif; Patterson, Nick; et al. (2014). "Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans". Nature. 513 (7518): 409–13. arXiv:1312.6639. Bibcode:2014Natur.513..409L. doi:10.1038/nature13673. PMC 4170574. PMID 25230663.
  • Martynov, Anatoly I, The Ancient Art of Northern Asia, trans. Demitri B. Shimkin and Edith M. Shimkin. Chicago, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1991.
  • Raghavan, Maanasa; Skoglund, Pontus; et al. (2014). "Upper Palaeolithic Siberian Genome Reveals Dual Ancestry of Native Americans". Nature. 505 (7481): 87–91. Bibcode:2014Natur.505...87R. doi:10.1038/nature12736. PMC 4105016. PMID 24256729.
  • Schlesier, Karl H (2001). "More on the Venus Figurines". Current Anthropology. 42 (3): 410–412. doi:10.1086/320478. S2CID 162218369.
  • Sieveking, Ann (1971). "Palaeolithic Decorated Bone Discs" T". The British Museum Quarterly. 35 (1/4): 206–229. doi:10.2307/4423083. JSTOR 4423083.
  • Vallini, Leonardo; Marciani, Giulia; Aneli, Serena; Bortolini, Eugenio; et al. (2022). "Genetics and Material Culture Support Repeated Expansions into Paleolithic Eurasia from a Population Hub Out of Africa". Genome Biology and Evolution. 14 (4). doi:10.1093/gbe/evac045. PMC 9021735. PMID 35445261.

External links edit

  • Mal'ta–Buret' culture
  • "Faces of our Ancestors: A centenary celebration of M. M. Gerasimov." Кунсткамера - Новости
  • Ancient Siberian’s skeleton yields links to Europe and Native Americans peene

buret, culture, confused, with, republic, malta, also, maltinsko, buretskaya, culture, archaeological, culture, upper, paleolithic, generally, dated, also, sometimes, located, roughly, northwest, lake, baikal, about, 90km, northwest, irkutsk, banks, upper, ang. Not to be confused with Republic of Malta The Mal ta Buret culture also Maltinsko buretskaya culture is an archaeological culture of the Upper Paleolithic generally dated to 24 000 23 000 BP but also sometimes to 15 000 BP 5 It is located roughly northwest of Lake Baikal about 90km to the northwest of Irkutsk on the banks of the upper Angara River Mal ta Buret cultureMal ta Buret Location of Mal ta Buret Geographical rangeIrkutsk Oblast Siberia Russian FederationPeriodUpper PaleolithicDates24 000 15 000 BPType siteSite of Mal ta 52 51 00 N 103 31 03 E 52 850045 N 103 517383 E 52 850045 103 517383 1 Site of Buret approx 53 00 10 N 103 30 31 E 53 002647 N 103 508696 E 53 002647 103 508696 Preceded byMousterian Denisova Cave 2 Aurignacian Followed byAfontova GoraEngraving of a mammoth on a slab of mammoth ivory from the Upper Paleolithic Mal ta deposits at Lake Baikal Siberia 3 4 The type sites are named for the villages of Mal ta Malta Usolsky District and Buret Bure t Bokhansky District both in Irkutsk Oblast A boy whose remains were found near Mal ta is usually known by the abbreviation MA 1 or MA1 Discovered in the 1920s the remains have been dated to 24 000 BP According to research published since 2013 MA 1 belonged to the population of Ancient North Eurasians who were genetically intermediate between modern western Eurasians and Native Americans but distant from east Asians 6 and partial genetic ancestors of Siberians American Indians and Bronze Age Yamnaya and Botai 7 people of the Eurasian steppe 8 9 In particular modern day Native Americans Kets Mansi and Selkup have been found to harbour a significant amount of ancestry related to MA 1 10 Much of what is known about Mal ta comes from the Russian archaeologist Mikhail Gerasimov Better known later for his contribution to the branch of anthropology known as forensic facial reconstruction Gerasimov made revolutionary discoveries when he excavated Mal ta in 1927 Until his findings the Upper Paleolithic societies of Northern Asia were virtually unknown Over the remainder of his career Gerasimov twice more visited Mal ta to excavate and research the site Contents 1 Material culture 1 1 Habitation and tools 1 2 Art 1 2 1 Venus figurines 1 2 1 1 Context of the Venus figurines 1 3 Symbolism 2 Archaeogenetics 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksMaterial culture editHabitation and tools edit nbsp The Mal ta Buret people lived in dwellings built of mammoth bones similar to those found in Upper Paleolithic Europe 11 Mal ta consists of semi subterranean houses that were built using large animal bones to assemble the walls and reindeer antlers covered with animal skins to construct a roof that would protect the inhabitants from the harsh elements of the Siberian weather 12 These dwellings built from mammoth bones were similar to those found in Upper Paleolithic Western Eurasia such as in the areas of France Czechoslovakia and Ukraine 11 nbsp Malta artefacts Moscow State Historical Museum Evidence seems to indicate that Mal ta is the most ancient known site in eastern Siberia with the nearby site of Buret 12 13 However relative dating illustrates some irregularities The use of flint flaking and the absence of pressure flaking used in the manufacture of tools as well as the continued use of earlier forms of tools seem to confirm the fact that the site belongs to the early Upper Paleolithic Yet it lacks typical skreblos large side scrapers that are common in other Siberian Paleolithic sites Additionally other common characteristics such as pebble cores wedge shaped cores burins and composite tools have never been found The lack of these features combined with an art style found in only one other nearby site the Venus of Buret make Mal ta culture unique in Siberia Art edit There were two main types of art during the Upper Paleolithic mural art which was concentrated in Western Europe and portable art Portable art typically some type of carving in ivory tusk or antler spans the distance across Western Europe into Northern and Central Asia Artistic remains of expertly carved bone ivory and antler objects depicting birds and human females are the most commonly found these objects are collectively the primary source of Mal ta s acclaim 12 In addition to the female statuettes there are bird sculptures depicting swans geese and ducks Through ethnographic analogy comparing the ivory objects and burials at Mal ta with objects used by 19th and 20th century Siberian shamans it has been suggested that they are evidence of a fully developed shamanism Also there are engraved representations on slabs of mammoth tusk One is the figure of a mammoth easily recognizable by the trunk tusks and thick legs Wool also seems to be etched by the placement of straight lines along the body Another drawing depicts three snakes with their heads puffed up and turned to the side It is believed that they were similar to cobras Venus figurines edit Main articles Mal ta Venus and Venus of Buret nbsp Mal ta burials artifacts and statuettes 14 Hooded clothed figurines nbsp nbsp Hooded clothed figurines with decorative stripes ivory from Mal ta No 13 left 15 16 Mal ta No 27 center 17 16 and Buret right 18 19 Perhaps the best example of Paleolithic portable art is something referred to as Venus figurines 12 The Mal ta boy dated 24 000 BP was buried with various artefacts and a Venus figurine 20 Until they were discovered in Mal ta Venus figurines were previously found only in Europe 12 Carved from the ivory tusk of a mammoth these images were typically highly stylized and often involved embellished and disproportionate characteristics typically the breasts or buttocks It is widely believed that these emphasized features were meant to be symbols of fertility Around thirty female statuettes of varying shapes have been found in Mal ta The wide variety of forms combined with the realism of the sculptures and the lack of repetitiveness in detail are definite signs of developed albeit early art At first glance what is obvious is that the Mal ta Venus figurines are of two types full figured women with exaggerated forms and women with a thin delicate form Some of the figures are nude while others have etchings that seem to indicate fur or clothing Conversely unlike those found in Europe some of the Venus figurines from Mal ta were sculpted with faces Most of the figurines were tapered at the bottom and it is believed that this was done to enable them to be stuck into the ground or otherwise placed upright Placed upright they could have symbolized the spirits of the dead akin to spirit dolls used nearly worldwide including in Siberia among contemporary people Context of the Venus figurines edit nbsp A replica of the Venus figurine of Mal ta discovered with the remains of the Mal ta boy MA 1 dated 24 000 BP 21 22 The Mal ta figurines garner interest in the western world because they seem to be of the same basic form as European female figurines of roughly the same time period suggestion some cultural and cultic connection 12 This similarity between Mal ta and Upper Paleolithic Europe coincides with other suggested similarities between the two such as in their tools and dwelling structures A 2016 genomic study shows that the Mal ta people have no genetic connections to the Dolni Vestonice people from the Gravettian culture The researchers conclude that the similarity between the figurines may be either due to cultural diffusion or to a coincidence but not to common ancestry between the populations 23 Symbolism edit nbsp nbsp An ivory plaque front and back with circular marks and three snakes 16 Discussing this easternmost outpost of paleolithic culture Joseph Campbell finishes by commenting on the symbolic forms of the artifacts found there We are clearly in a paleolithic province where the serpent labyrinth and rebirth themes already constitute a symbolic constellation joined with the imagery of the sunbird and shaman flight with the goddess in her classic role of protectress of the hearth mother of man s second birth and lady of wild things and of the food supply 24 Archaeogenetics editMain article Ancient North EurasianMA 1 is the only known example of basal Y DNA R R M207 that is the only member of haplogroup R that did not belong to haplogroups R1 R2 or secondary subclades of these The mitochondrial DNA of MA 1 belonged to an unresolved subclade of haplogroup U 25 The remains of the Mal ta boy MA 1 are currently in the Hermitage Museum Saint Petersburg nbsp Mal ta boy MA 1 dated 24 000 BP with tomb artifacts Hermitage Museum Saint Petersburg 26 nbsp Grave artifacts of the Mal ta boy MA 1 The term Ancient North Eurasian ANE has been given in genetic literature to an ancestral component that represents descent from the people similar to the Mal ta Buret culture and the closely related population of Afontova Gora 10 27 A people similar to MA1 and Afontova Gora were important genetic contributors to Native Americans Siberians Europeans Caucasians Central Asians with smaller contributions to Middle Easterners and some East Asians 28 Lazaridis et al 2016 notes a cline of ANE ancestry across the east west extent of Eurasia 28 The ANE cline as observed among Paleolithic Siberian populations and their direct descendants developed from a sister lineage of Europeans with significant admixture from early East Asians 29 30 MA1 is also related to two older Upper Paleolithic Siberian individuals found at the Yana Rhinoceros Horn Site called Ancient North Siberians ANS 31 nbsp Genetic proximity of Mal ta to other Ancient North Eurasian populations Yana and Afontova Gora but also to Ust Ishim Sunghir and European populations within a principal component analysis of ancient and present day individuals from worldwide populations 32 nbsp Mal ta Ancient North Eurasian population within a maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree 32 nbsp The Ancient North Eurasian ANE network corresponding to the Mal ta Buret and the closely related Afontova Gora cultures contributed ancestry towards later Eastern European Hunter Gatherers EHG and Native Americans as well as indirectly towards later Steppe pastoralists specifically the Yamnaya culture 7 References edit Lbova Liudmila 2021 The Siberian Palaeolithic Site of Mal ta A Unique Source for The Study of Childhood Archaeology Evolutionary Human Sciences Fig 1 3 Fagan Brian M 5 December 1996 The Oxford Companion to Archaeology Oxford University Press p 644 ISBN 978 0 19 977121 9 Plate with the image of mammoth Art of Mal ta Novosibirsk State University The mammoth engraving is item 37 in this inventory Bednarik Robert G 2013 Pleistocene Palaeoart of Asia Arts 2 2 48 doi 10 3390 arts2020046 Raghavan Maanasa 2014 Upper Palaeolithic Siberian genome reveals dual ancestry of Native Americans Nature 505 7481 87 91 Bibcode 2014Natur 505 87R doi 10 1038 nature12736 PMC 4105016 PMID 24256729 In the first two principal components MA 1 is intermediate between modern western Eurasians and Native Americans but distant from east Asians a b Jeong Choongwon Balanovsky Oleg Lukianova Elena Kahbatkyzy Nurzhibek Flegontov Pavel Zaporozhchenko Valery Immel Alexander Wang Chuan Chao Ixan Olzhas Khussainova Elmira Bekmanov Bakhytzhan Zaibert Victor Lavryashina Maria Pocheshkhova Elvira Yusupov Yuldash Agdzhoyan Anastasiya Sergey Koshel Bukin Andrei Nymadawa Pagbajabyn Churnosov Michail Skhalyakho Roza Daragan Denis Bogunov Yuri Bogunova Anna Shtrunov Alexandr Dubova Nadezda Zhabagin Maxat Yepiskoposyan Levon Churakov Vladimir Pislegin Nikolay Damba Larissa Saroyants Ludmila Dibirova Khadizhat Artamentova Lubov Utevska Olga Idrisov Eldar Kamenshchikova Evgeniya Evseeva Irina Metspalu Mait Robbeets Martine Djansugurova Leyla Balanovska Elena Schiffels Stephan Haak Wolfgang Reich David Krause Johannes 23 May 2018 Characterizing the genetic history of admixture across inner Eurasia bioRxiv 10 1101 327122 Ancient DNA studies have already shown that human populations of this region have dramatically transformed over time For example the Upper Paleolithic genomes from the Mal ta and Afontova Gora archaeological sites in southern Siberia revealed a genetic profile often referred to as Ancient North Eurasians ANE which is deeply related to Paleolithic Mesolithic hunter gatherers in Europe and also substantially contributed to the gene pools of modern day Native Americans Siberians Europeans and South Asians Raghavan amp Skoglund et al 2014 Haak amp Lazaridis et al 2015 a b Flegontov amp Changmai et al 2015 a b Dolitsky Alexander B Ackerman Robert E Aigner Jean S Bryan Alan L Dennell Robin Guthrie R Dale Hoffecker John F Hopkins David M Lanata Jose Luis Workman William B 1985 Siberian Paleolithic Archaeology Approaches and Analytic Methods and Comments and Replies Current Anthropology 26 3 361 378 doi 10 1086 203280 ISSN 0011 3204 JSTOR 2742734 S2CID 147371671 The Upper Paleolithic inhabitants of the European region spanned by France Czechoslovakia and the Ukraine led a hunting life resembling that of the people of Mal ta and Buret and built similar dwellings of matching construction from the bones of extinct large mammals a b c d e f Tedesco Laura Anne Mal ta ca 20 000 B C The Met s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art Karen Diane Jennett May 2008 Female Figurines of the Upper Paleolithic PDF Texas State University Retrieved 26 May 2016 Lbova Liudmila 2021 The Siberian Palaeolithic Site of Mal ta A Unique Source for The Study of Childhood Archaeology Evolutionary Human Sciences 3 doi 10 1017 ehs 2021 5 PMC 10427291 S2CID 231980510 Photograph Miniature sculpture of a teenager in overalls Art of Mal ta Novosibirsk State University a b c Bednarik Robert G 2013 Pleistocene Palaeoart of Asia Arts 2 2 46 76 doi 10 3390 arts2020046 Photograph Figurine of dressed teenager Art of Mal ta Novosibirsk State University Photograph Anthropomphic figurine Buret Art of Mal ta Novosibirsk State University 1 Ancient DNA from Siberian boy links Europe and America BBC News 20 November 2013 Ancient DNA from Siberian boy links Europe and America BBC News 20 November 2013 Lbova Liudmila Volkov Pavel 1 June 2016 Processing technology for the objects of mobile art in the Upper Paleolithic of Siberia the Malta site Quaternary International 403 17 doi 10 1016 j quaint 2015 10 019 ISSN 1040 6182 Fu Qiaomei Posth Cosimo et al May 2 2016 The genetic history of Ice Age Europe Nature 504 7606 200 5 Bibcode 2016Natur 534 200F doi 10 1038 nature17993 hdl 10211 3 198594 PMC 4943878 PMID 27135931 Campbell Joseph 1987 Primitive Mythology pp 331 ISBN 0 14 019443 6 Raghavan Maanasa Skoglund Pontus Graf Kelly E Metspalu Mait Albrechtsen Anders Moltke Ida Rasmussen Simon Stafford Jr Thomas W Orlando Ludovic Metspalu Ene Karmin Monika Tambets Kristiina Rootsi Siiri Magi Reedik Campos Paula F Balanovska Elena Balanovsky Oleg Khusnutdinova Elza Litvinov Sergey Osipova Ludmila P Fedorova Sardana A Voevoda Mikhail I DeGiorgio Michael Sicheritz Ponten Thomas Brunak Soren Demeshchenko Svetlana Kivisild Toomas Villems Richard Nielsen Rasmus Jakobsson Mattias Willerslev Eske January 2014 Upper Palaeolithic Siberian genome reveals dual ancestry of Native Americans Nature 505 7481 87 91 Bibcode 2014Natur 505 87R doi 10 1038 nature12736 PMC 4105016 PMID 24256729 Lbova Liudmila 2021 The Siberian Paleolithic site of Mal ta a unique source for the study of childhood archaeology Evolutionary Human Sciences 3 8 Fig 6 1 doi 10 1017 ehs 2021 5 S2CID 231980510 Lazaridis Iosif Nadel Dani Rollefson Gary et al 16 June 2016 Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the ancient Near East Nature 536 7617 419 424 Bibcode 2016Natur 536 419L bioRxiv 10 1101 059311 doi 10 1038 nature19310 PMC 5003663 PMID 27459054 a b Lazaridis et al 2016 p 10 Vallini et al 2022 Supplementary Information p 17 Paleolithic Siberian populations younger than 40 ky are consistently described as a mix of European and East Asian ancestries Villalba Mouco Vanessa van de Loosdrecht Marieke S Rohrlach Adam B Fewlass Helen Talamo Sahra Yu He Aron Franziska Lalueza Fox Carles Cabello Lidia Cantalejo Duarte Pedro Ramos Munoz Jose Posth Cosimo Krause Johannes Weniger Gerd Christian Haak Wolfgang 2023 03 01 A 23 000 year old southern Iberian individual links human groups that lived in Western Europe before and after the Last Glacial Maximum Nature Ecology amp Evolution 7 4 597 609 doi 10 1038 s41559 023 01987 0 ISSN 2397 334X PMC 10089921 PMID 36859553 This is because the ancestry found in Mal ta and Afontova Gora individuals Ancient North Eurasian ancestry received ancestry from UP East Asian Southeast Asian populations54 who then contributed substantially to EHG55 Sikora Martin Pitulko Vladimir V Sousa Vitor C Allentoft Morten E Vinner Lasse Rasmussen Simon Margaryan Ashot de Barros Damgaard Peter de la Fuente Constanza Renaud Gabriel Yang Melinda A Fu Qiaomei Dupanloup Isabelle Giampoudakis Konstantinos Nogues Bravo David Rahbek Carsten Kroonen Guus Peyrot Michael McColl Hugh Vasilyev Sergey V Veselovskaya Elizaveta Gerasimova Margarita Pavlova Elena Y Chasnyk Vyacheslav G Nikolskiy Pavel A Gromov Andrei V Khartanovich Valeriy I Moiseyev Vyacheslav Grebenyuk Pavel S Fedorchenko Alexander Yu Lebedintsev Alexander I Slobodin Sergey B Malyarchuk Boris A Martiniano Rui Meldgaard Morten Arppe Laura Palo Jukka U Sundell Tarja Mannermaa Kristiina Putkonen Mikko Alexandersen Verner Primeau Charlotte Baimukhanov Nurbol Malhi Ripan S Sjogren Karl Goran Kristiansen Kristian Wessman Anna Sajantila Antti Lahr Marta Mirazon Durbin Richard Nielsen Rasmus Meltzer David J Excoffier Laurent Willerslev Eske June 2019 The population history of northeastern Siberia since the Pleistocene PDF Nature 570 7760 182 188 Bibcode 2019Natur 570 182S doi 10 1038 s41586 019 1279 z PMID 31168093 S2CID 174809069 a b Gakuhari Takashi Nakagome Shigeki Rasmussen Simon Allentoft Morten E 25 August 2020 Ancient Jomon genome sequence analysis sheds light on migration patterns of early East Asian populations Communications Biology 3 1 Fig 1 A B doi 10 1038 s42003 020 01162 2 ISSN 2399 3642 PMC 7447786 PMID 32843717 Bibliography edit nbsp Excavation site of the Mal ta Buret culture red dot on the banks of the Angara River about 150 km from Lake Baikal Bednarik Robert G 1994 The Pleistocene Art of Asia Journal of World Prehistory 8 4 351 75 doi 10 1007 bf02221090 S2CID 161683955 Chard Chester S 1974 Northeast Asia in Prehistory Madison WI The University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 9780299064303 Dolitsky A B Ackerman R E et al 1985 Siberian Paleolithic Archaeology Approaches and Analytic Methods Current Anthropology 26 3 361 78 doi 10 1086 203280 S2CID 147371671 Flegontov Pavel Changmai Piya et al Feb 11 2016 Genomic study of the Ket a Paleo Eskimo related ethnic group with significant ancient North Eurasian ancestry Scientific Reports 6 20768 arXiv 1508 03097 Bibcode 2016NatSR 620768F doi 10 1038 srep20768 PMC 4750364 PMID 26865217 Haak W Lazaridis I et al 2015 Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo European languages in Europe Nature 522 7555 207 11 arXiv 1502 02783 Bibcode 2015Natur 522 207H doi 10 1038 nature14317 PMC 5048219 PMID 25731166 Jones Eppie R Gonzalez Fortes Gloria et al 2015 Upper Palaeolithic genomes reveal deep roots of modern Eurasians Nature Communications 6 8912 Bibcode 2015NatCo 6 8912J doi 10 1038 ncomms9912 PMC 4660371 PMID 26567969 Lazaridis Iosif Patterson Nick et al 2014 Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present day Europeans Nature 513 7518 409 13 arXiv 1312 6639 Bibcode 2014Natur 513 409L doi 10 1038 nature13673 PMC 4170574 PMID 25230663 Martynov Anatoly I The Ancient Art of Northern Asia trans Demitri B Shimkin and Edith M Shimkin Chicago Illinois University of Illinois Press 1991 Raghavan Maanasa Skoglund Pontus et al 2014 Upper Palaeolithic Siberian Genome Reveals Dual Ancestry of Native Americans Nature 505 7481 87 91 Bibcode 2014Natur 505 87R doi 10 1038 nature12736 PMC 4105016 PMID 24256729 Schlesier Karl H 2001 More on the Venus Figurines Current Anthropology 42 3 410 412 doi 10 1086 320478 S2CID 162218369 Sieveking Ann 1971 Palaeolithic Decorated Bone Discs T The British Museum Quarterly 35 1 4 206 229 doi 10 2307 4423083 JSTOR 4423083 Vallini Leonardo Marciani Giulia Aneli Serena Bortolini Eugenio et al 2022 Genetics and Material Culture Support Repeated Expansions into Paleolithic Eurasia from a Population Hub Out of Africa Genome Biology and Evolution 14 4 doi 10 1093 gbe evac045 PMC 9021735 PMID 35445261 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mal ta Buret culture Mal ta Buret culture Faces of our Ancestors A centenary celebration of M M Gerasimov Kunstkamera Novosti Ancient Siberian s skeleton yields links to Europe and Native Americans peene Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mal 27ta Buret 27 culture amp oldid 1204621145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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