plan. Anthropodermic bibliopegy (books bound in human skin) Degloving Excarnation Scalping Écorché p.69 Kleine Kulturgeschichte der Haut. p. 69. Ernst... 17 KB (2,086 words) - 03:26, 3 March 2024 |
other alterations, which could be evidence of mortuary practices like excarnation. Fossils of Herto Man were first recovered in 1997 from the Upper Herto... 16 KB (2,068 words) - 20:48, 9 March 2024 |
is a Tibetan open-air excarnation funerary practice. Sky burial may also refer to: Dakhma, a Zoroastrian open-air excarnation funerary practice Space... 489 bytes (94 words) - 23:16, 28 February 2023 |
to exhaustion and hyperthermia. In Tibetan Buddhism the practice of excarnation – that is, the exposure of dead human bodies to carrion birds and/or... 27 KB (3,029 words) - 04:39, 22 April 2024 |
Neanderthals, like some contemporary human cultures, may have practiced excarnation for presumably religious reasons (see Neanderthal behavior § Cannibalism... 24 KB (2,408 words) - 19:05, 19 March 2024 |
wood, stone or earthwork barrier, in which dead bodies are placed for excarnation and to await secondary and/or collective burial. There are some parallels... 2 KB (232 words) - 13:01, 13 February 2023 |