Bronze Age deer stone monuments of Mongolia that intrigued travelers and archaeologists became the target of modern science by a Smithsonian-Mongolian team in 2001-2004. For the first time Mongolia’s ancient "stone men" have been dated accurately to 1400-700 BCE and have been shown to be part of the Deer Stone-Khirigsuur culture. These nomadic pastoralists and warriors honored their deceased leaders with stone anthropomorphic figures ornamented with carvings of Scythian-style deer and weapon belts while their bodies were buried nearby in stone mounds. Visits to the Mongolia’s Tsaatan/Dukha people, the last reindeer-herding peoples of Central Asia helped archaeologists interpret ancient shamanic and mortuary rituals of the Deer Stone people.
William W. Fitzhugh is an archaeologist who directs the Arctic Studies Center at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington D.C. He has researched Arctic peoples and cultures throughout the Circumpolar North and has produced exhibits and books on Eskimo, Ainu, and North Pacific cultures and art, Vikings, Genghis Khan, and other topics. He resides in Washington DC and Vermont and is affiliated with Dartmouth College.
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