Nonetheless our family of interest has been radiocarbon dated:
• MYG001 (J2b-L283>>Z615) (Intramuros Child Grave3.A) is a perinatal infant of 30-40 weeks in utero with no apparent pathologies. Radiocarbon-dating on human bone (MYG001.A): 3265±21 BP, 1611-1457 cal BC (95% probability), (ID: MAMS-47527, AMS, IntCal20).
• MYG002 (Intramuros Child Grave3.B) is a perinatal infant of 30-40 weeks in utero with no apparent pathologies. Radiocarbon-dating on human bone (MYG002.A): 3318±21 BP, 1626-1518 cal BC (95% probability), (ID: MAMS-47528, AMS, IntCal20).
• MYG003 (Intramuros Child Grave3.C) is an infant of 30-40 weeks in utero with no apparent pathologies. Radiocarbon-dating on human bone (MYG003.A): 3318±21 BP, 1596-1438 cal BC (95% probability), (ID: MAMS-47529, AMS, IntCal20).
• MYG005 (J2b-L283>>Z615) (Intramuros Child Grave3.E) is a perinatal infant of 30-40 weeks in utero with no apparent pathologies. Radiocarbon-dating on human bone (MYG005.A): 3198±23 BP, 1504-1425 cal BC (95% probability), (ID: MAMS-47531, AMS, IntCal20).
• MYG006 (J2b-L283>>Z615) (Intramuros Child Grave3.F) is a perinatal infant of 30-40 weeks in utero with no apparent pathologies. Radiocarbon-dating on human bone (MYG006.A): 3262±29 BP, 1612-1452 cal BC (95% probability), (ID: MAMS-47532, AMS, IntCal20).
• MYG008 (J2b-L283>>Z615) (Intramuros Child Grave3.H) is an infant one-three months old with no apparent pathologies. Radiocarbon-dating on human bone (MYG008.A): 3262±29 BP, 1611-1452 cal BC -(95% probability), (ID: MAMS-47533, AMS, IntCal20).
About the site: "The excavation on Mygdalia hill (Papazoglou-Manioudaki and Paschalidis, 2017) provides a unique opportunity to investigate the life ways of a local Mycenaean society in the Patras region of Achaea, the settlement, the cemeteries, and the resources available (arable land, areas for herding, water supply). Mygdalia belongs to the group of Mycenaean settlements that were founded in the transitional period of Middle Helladic III/Late Helladic I (Mygdalia I) and rose to local prominence in the Early Mycenaean period (Mygdalia II). Substantial architectural remains, floor deposits and a tholos tomb furnished with pottery, that now finds parallels in settlement strata, will help define this important period in western Achaea. Its floruit came to an abrupt end at the beginning of the Palatial period, and continuation of full-scale habitation on the hill remains ambiguous (Mygdalia III) until its new floruit in the 12th century BC (Mygdalia IV). The mansion on top of Mygdalia hill (Terrace 1) and a large storeroom (Terrace 2) provide evidence for social organization in the Postpalatial period, the time of chamber tomb cemetery reuse and the warrior graves in Achaea. The primary domestic space at Mygdalia was found on Terrace 2 (Supplementary Figure 29). The area consists of densely built houses with rectangular rooms, semi open spaces and courtyards. Also found on Terrace 2 were four Mycenaean intramural children’s graves (Supplementary Figure 29), containing the remains of multiple infant and child inhumations interred in stone cists without grave goods, and two Archaic adult burials containing single primary inhumations (Papazoglou-Manioudaki et al., 2019) dating from the onset of the 7th century BC (Mygdalia V) when the area was transformed into an early Greek temple. Intramuros Child Grave 3 is a stone slab cist grave with cover stone that is located just outside of the settlement’s wall (Papazoglou-Manioudaki et al., 2019) (Supplementary Figure 30). "