A 3D printer has been used to recreate a skull found during excavations of St Paul’s Catacombs in Rabat between 2010 and 2014.

The recreation is the fruit of collaboration between Heritage Malta and Thought3D.

St Paul’s Catacombs was used as a spiritual hub and burial ground from the Phoenician up to the Byzantine period. Secrets about ancient societies that used it over the past 2,400 years ago are slowly being unravelled.

Research is also revealing insights on some of the individuals buried here during the 900 years or so that this site was used for burials.

Archaeologists excavating the site managed to recover most of the skeleton, as well as a number of artefacts with which she was buried.

St Paul’s Catacombs consist of two large areas littered with more than 30 hypogea, of which the main complex, situated within the St Paul’s cluster, comprises a complex system of interconnected passages and tombs covering an area over 2,000 square metres. These are, however, only a small fraction of the large cemetery that used to occupy the area.

The skull being studied belongs to skeleton 248, pertaining to a young lady that was strangely buried in the shaft of tomb 15 rather than in the burial chamber itself.

The skeleton was discovered articulated from the mid-thoracic region upwards with the rest of the bones found piled in the layers above the articulation. This was evidence of people wanting to access the actual burial chamber after she was buried and most of the skeleton was thus shovelled to one side, Heritage Malta said.

Nevertheless, archaeologists excavating the site managed to recover most of the skeleton, as well as a number of artefacts with which she was buried. These include imported ceramics, a small glass pendant in the shape of a human face, a bone hair pin still lodged behind her head where it used to hold her hair and a small perfume glass bottle that was placed right next to her head at the time of burial.

The original skeleton and the artefacts are on display at St Paul’s Catacombs.

More information about Heritage Malta’s museums and sites can be obtained on the agency’s website, www.heritagemalta.org

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