HOTU
AND KAMARBAND CAVES
Upper
entry of Hotu cave
The
Hotu and Kamarband Caves or Belt Caves are prehistoric, archaeological
sites in Iran. They are located 100 m (330 ft) apart, in a cliff
on the slopes of the Alborz mountains in the village of Tarujen
(currently called Shahid Abad), 5 km (3.1 mi) south west of Behshahr.
Excavations
took place led by Carleton S. Coon and were reported on between
1949 and 1957.
Hotu
Cave has an approximate size of 30 m × 20 m (98.4 ft ×
65.6 ft). The site produced pottery shards, stone tools and material
that could be radio-carbon dated. Twenty-two samples were dated
and attributed to eight different cultures. The 2 earliest cultures,
present at around 9,910 to 7,240 years BCE are assumed to be seal
hunters and vole eaters. The bones of a dog have been cited as an
example of exceptionally early animal domestication. Pre-Neolithic
finds date to around 6,120 years BCE.
Kamarband
cave is notable for three human skeletons discovered there, dating
to approximately 9,000 years BCE. Other finds include flint blades,
walrus and deer bones, giving valuable information about human development
from the ice age in the Mazandaran area.
At
Hotu Cave dwellers were identified as having Y-chromosome haplogroup
J (xJ2a1b3, J2b2a1a1), with a more refined analysis putting it at
J2a-PF5008*.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Hotu_and_Kamarband
_Caves