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Facial reconstruction of a 4,500-year-old man from Khapuz-Depe, Southern Turkmenistan The man belonged to the Namazga cultural horizon, which later transitioned into the Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex (BMAC). The anthropologists Ginzburg and Trofimova (1972) describe the cranial series from the region as follows: Male skulls from Khapuz-Depe, Kara-Depe, and Geoksiur are dolichocranial (CI 70.0), with very large cranial length (195.1 mm), large height (139.5 mm), and small breadth (136.1 mm). The forehead slope is moderate, the supraorbital region is well developed, and the face—while average in absolute dimensions—shows a relatively high facial index (55.1). The series is orthognathic, with strong horizontal facial profiling, a deep canine fossa, a high and strongly projecting nose, medium nasal breadth (NI 50.0), and low orbits. Taken together, these traits place the series within the Eastern Mediterranean type, widespread in antiquity across southern and frontal Central Asia. Female skulls differ in the expected direction of sexual dimorphism, showing relatively greater facial height. The population of the eastern region of Southern Turkmenistan on the right bank of the Tedjen River (Geoksiur-Depe and Khapuz-Depe) was mixed. Among the male skulls from Geoksiur and the female skulls from both series, the Eastern Mediterranean type clearly predominates; this type can be traced through the 3rd–2nd millennia BC and further east into southern Uzbekistan (Zaman-Baba, Chust, Dalverzin). Among the male skulls from Khapuz-Depe, however, a broad-faced, low-faced Europoid type of Cro-Magnoid appearance predominates; this type is attested in the 2nd millennium BCE in the lower Tedjen region (Geoksiur) and, by the end of the 2nd millennium BC, in southern Tajikistan (Tigrovaya Balka I). Khapuz-Depe skulls differ from both Kara-Depe and Geoksiur series in facial proportions, namely a small facial height combined with a large bizygomatic breadth, yielding a facial index of 50.5, at the lower limit of the mesene range. Overall, the Khapuz-Depe series is close to Cappieri’s Palestinian type, differing in a more dolichocranial and narrow cranial form and a greater nasal breadth. Morphologically, these skulls are close to the Cro-Magnoid–like skulls from Monjukly-Depe of the 5th millennium BC, as well as to the skulls from Hotu Cave.

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