Ancient instruments still play well after 1,700 years

Archaeologists discovered a lipstick in the Altai Mountains, Russia, that could produce sounds after 1,700 years, National Geographic reported yesterday.

Archaeologists have discovered that a lip flock made from animal bones can still produce sounds in Russia.

Archaeologists discovered a lipstick in the Altai Mountains, Russia, that could produce sounds after 1,700 years, National Geographic reported yesterday. This instrument is one of five lip flocks they find in two archaeological sites, Chultukov Log 9 and Cheremshanka.

"I tried it myself from Cheremshanka," said Andrey Borodovsky, a professor at the Institute of Archeology and Anthropology at the Russian Academy of Sciences. He studied these instruments for more than 20 years and said that one of Cheremshanka's lips still plays.

Picture 1 of Ancient instruments still play well after 1,700 years

The new ancient lips found in Russia.(Photo: National Geographic).

These may have been due to craftsmen making cow or horse bones about 1,700 years ago, when the Hung controlled a large territory in Central Asia. They are nomads, living in areas like Mongolia, Kazakhstan, northeastern China and southern Russia today.

Instruments made by Altai craftsmen are not like other ancient instruments in Central Asia. Mongolian craftsmen and Tuva, Russia, use other materials such as deer horns to make their lips. Archaeologists have found a piece of plaque with deer horns in southern Siberia about 40 years ago.

Newly discovered lips in Russia are still quite modern compared to the type of record, which are 43,000-year-old flutes made from bird bones and mammoth ivory in a cave in southern Germany.

The lipstick that Borodovsky played was about 10.9cm long and 8.4cm wide. He remarked that the sound was similar to flageolet, a Renaissance-era musical instrument that resembled a flute.

Update 17 December 2018
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