One of the things that has always bugged me about archeology and anthropology is the general assumption that, "If you don't know what it's for... it's for some religious purpose."
I remember particularly a scene I saw from an analysis of the Ice Man they found in the alps. He had, amongst other things, an axe with a copper axe-head on it.
Cut to: know-it-all archaeologist: "Copper is such a soft metal that it would be useless as an actual tool."
Cut to: neolithic recreationist: "Having used a flint axe and a copper axe, I'd have to say that while the flint axe stays sharper longer, the copper axe is easier to sharpen. If I had to choose between the two, I'd want the copper axe."
Cut to: know-it-all archaeologist: "So, having dispensed with the notion that this was used as a tool, we must ponder its religious significance."
You get this attitude tripled when you're dealing with tombs... which is partly fair, because the whole idea of a tomb in the first place is all about its symbolizing. But there are certain exigencies in building a tomb: physical space, engineering, geology of the ground, actually getting the corpse into it, etc.
Not everything means something. If I have a beer before breakfast, it doesn't mean that I believe Jesus was left-handed. (Although he probably was.)
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