Images of bones found (Internet)
A team of archaeologists working on a project that seeks to identify the first inhabitants of the Dominican Republic reported the discovery of an ancient cemetery in the area known as El Francés, on the eastern end of the Samaná peninsula, located in the northeastern part of the country.
“What we are excavating right now is a ritual-funerary zone. More than a cemetery, it is a very sacred site, very magical, where people were buried who were among the first groups that lived on the island,” said archaeologist Adolfo López, in charge of the excavation, to the international network CNN en Español.
So far, Lopez and his team claim to have discovered 17 corpses, and although they have not yet determined their age, they explained that the archaic funerary complex dates back some 3,000 years.
“We are going to work on the issue of DNA and Carbon 14 (to identify the age of the remains) with Harvard University, who are working hand in hand with us on this,” the archaeologist explained to the international media.
The project is called “Identification of the origin and affiliation of the first archaic inhabitants of the island” and consists of collecting remains of the first inhabitants of the country to study the DNA and the materials associated with them, to know from which part of the continent they came from and how they developed.
(With information from CNN en Español)