MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Archaeologists
have unearthed remnants of what they believe is a 1,000-year-old village
on a jungle-covered mountaintop in the Philippines with limestone
coffins of a type never before found in this Southeast Asian nation,
officials said Thursday.
National Museum official
Eusebio Dizon said the village on Mount Kamhantik, near Mulanay town in
Quezon province, could be at least 1,000 years old based on U.S. carbon
dating tests done on a human tooth found in 1 of 15 limestone graves he
and other archaeologists have dug out since last year.
The discovery of the
rectangular tombs, which were carved into limestone outcrops jutting
from the forest ground, is important because it is the first indication
that Filipinos at that time practiced a more advanced burial ritual than
previously thought and that they used metal tools to carve the coffins.
Past archaeological
discoveries have shown Filipinos of that era used wooden coffins in the
country's mountainous north and earthen coffins and jars elsewhere,
according to Dizon, who has done extensive archaeological work and
studies in the Philippines and 27 other countries over the past 35
years.
Aside from the tombs,
archaeologists have found thousands of shards of earthen jars, metal
objects and bone fragments of humans, monkeys, wild pigs and other
animals in the tombs. The limestone outcrops had round holes where
wooden posts of houses or sheds may have once stood, Dizon told The
Associated Press in an exclusive interview.
The tombs were similar to
ancient sarcophagus, which have become popular tourist attractions in
Egypt and Europe, although the ones found in Mulanay were simple
box-like limestone coffins without mythological or elaborate human
images on the tops and sides.
Archaeologists have only
worked on a small portion of a five-hectare (12-acre) forest area, where
Mulanay officials said more artifacts and limestone coffins could be
buried.
A preliminary National
Museum report said its top archaeologists found "a complex
archaeological site with both habitation and burial remains from the
period of approximately 10th to the 14th century ... the first of its
kind in the Philippines having carved limestone tombs."
The discovery has been
welcomed with excitement in Mulanay, a sleepy coastal town of 50,000
people in an impoverished mountainous region that until recently was
best known as a major battleground between army troops and Marxist
rebels.
"Before, if you mention
this region, people will say 'Oh, that's NPA country,'" Mulanay Mayor
Joselito Ojeda said, referring to the New People's Army rebels. "But
that era is past and now we can erase that image and this archaeological
site will be a big help."
Mulanay tourism officer
Sanny Cortez said that after archaeologists have finished their work in a
few years, his town plans to turn Mount Kamhantik's peak into an
archaeological and ecotourism park. A museum would also be built nearby.
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