2,800-year-old burial mound with sacrifices unearthed in Siberia is eerily similar to Scythian graves

A 2,800-year-old burial in Siberia that contains the remains of an elite individual, who was buried with at least one sacrificed human and 18 sacrificed horses, appears to belong to a culture closely related to the enigmatic Scythians, a new study finds.

The kurgan, or large burial mound, was unearthed in Tuva, a republic in southern Siberia. It dates to the transition between the Bronze and Iron ages, and it’s one of the earliest known of its kind to show Scythian burial practices, according to the study, published Tuesday (Oct. 8) in the journal Antiquity.

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