An 'Extraordinary' Discovery
2,300-Year-Old Scythian Tomb Found In Southern Siberia
www.cbsnews.comHere are the latest publicly reported developments about Scythians from reliable sources:
Illustration: A recent schematic of the Scythian genome-wide studies and burial site discoveries shows a web of eastern origins, trade connections, and later western interactions, illustrating the evolving view of Scythians as a culturally interconnected steppe people rather than a monolithic group.[4]
Citations
2,300-Year-Old Scythian Tomb Found In Southern Siberia
www.cbsnews.comJENA, GERMANY—The Scythians who lived in Central Asia and Eastern Europe some 2,500 years ago […]
archaeology.orgSCYTHIANS, a nomadic people of Iranian origin who flourished in the steppe lands north of the Black Sea during the 7th-4th centuries BCE (Figure 1). For related groups in Central...
www.iranicaonline.orgNew research of burial remains in the Pontic-Caspian steppe is helping archaeologists and historians break with stereotypes which has traditionally remembered the Scythians as fierce nomadic warriors.
www.ancient-origins.netScythians
www.scribd.comBurial includes ornate belt, ram-headed buckle, bronze mirror, and horse harness elements, revealing the elite status of the Scythian Noble...
arkeonews.netArchaeologists have uncovered evidence for sacrificial funerary rituals at the Early Iron Age burial mound of Tunnug 1 in Tuva, Siberia, indicating that the horse-riding Scythian culture, best-known from Eastern Europe, originated far to the east.
phys.org