Lion’s jawbone found in Kültepe

This year's excavations in the ancient site of Kültepe, located in the Central Anatolian province of Kayseri, have unearthed a lion's jawbone dating back 4,000 years.

The head of the excavations, Ankara University archeology department lecturer Professor Fikri Kulakoğlu stated that they found many animal bones and big logs in the basement of a large structure in the area in 2021.

Pointing out that Claudia Minniti, a zoo archaeologist from the University of Salento, Italy, and a member of the Kültepe Excavation Committee, conducted scientific studies on these animal bones, Kulakoğlu said, "The jawbone of a lion was found for the first time in Kültepe."

Stating that mostly ceramic, metal and bone objects were unearthed during the excavations related to the period called Asian Excavations, Kulakoğlu said that the bone finds are extremely important for Kültepe and Anatolia.

"During the excavations this year, we found a group of bones of two lions, bears, mountain sheep, deer and wild pigs in a trench. These bones were found together. All of these animal bones belong to large and wild animals. For the first time, we found two separate jawbones of two different lions, a very large bear, and bones of a large deer in this period in Anatolia," he said.

"These are the animals that lived in this region; animals that lived around Erciyes or in mountainous areas. There are no lion bones unearthed in other regions dating back 4,000 years. Of course, there are bones from several million years ago. But these are two of the earliest examples from human settlement. We date these bones to 4,000 years ago. These are wild animals, they must have been hunted and brought to Kültepe," he said.

Kulakoğlu stated that these...

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