PLOS ONE RESEARCH ARTICLE Emergence of corpse cremation during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic of the Southern Levant: A multidisciplinary study of a pyre-pit burial 1 2,3 4 5 Fanny BocquentinID *, Marie Anton , Francesco Berna , Arlene Rosen , 6 7 8 9 Hamoudi Khalaily , Harris Greenberg , Thomas C. HartID , Omri Lernau , Liora Kolska Horwitz10 1 Cogitamus Laboratory and CNRS, UMR 7041, ArScAn, Equipe Ethnologie PreÂhistorique, MSH Mondes, Nanterre, France, 2 Universite Paris 1, PantheÂon-Sorbonne, Paris, France, 3 CNRS, UMR 7206, MuseÂe de l'Homme, E co-Anthropologie et Ethnologie, Paris, France, 4 Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser a1111111111 University, Burnaby, Canada, 5 Department of Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, a1111111111 United States of America, 6 Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem, Israel, 7 Department of Archaeology, a1111111111 Boston University, Boston, MA, United States of America, 8 Department of Anthropology, Franklin and a1111111111 Marshall College, Lancaster, PA, United States of America, 9 Zinman Institute of Archaeology, University of a1111111111 Haifa, Haifa, Israel, 10 National Natural History Collections, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel *
[email protected] OPEN ACCESS Abstract Citation: Bocquentin F, Anton M, Berna F, Rosen A, Renewed excavations at the Neolithic site of Beisamoun (Upper Jordan Valley, Israel) has Khalaily H, Greenberg H, et al. (2020) Emergence of corpse cremation during the Pre-Pottery resulted in the discovery of the earliest occurrence of an intentional cremation in the Near Neolithic of the Southern Levant: A East directly dated to 7031±6700 cal BC (Pre-Pottery Neolithic C, also known as Final multidisciplinary study of a pyre-pit burial.