Prehistoric Giurgiulesti cemetery was discovered in 1991, when the local kurgans were being excavated. This monument belongs to Suvorovo-Novodanilovka culture group, and dates back to about 4200/4100 BC or even earlier. The local settlement formed a part of the Balkan-Carpathian cultural world, but also had strong connection to the migratory steppe herders.
Suvorovo culture was a
Copper Age culture that flourished on the northwest Pontic steppe and the lower Danube, and the
Novodanilovka group spread at the same time along the lower Dnieper and the steppes of Ukraine. In Giurgiulesti, there are also links to the
Cucuteni-Tripolie, and
Gumelnita (Bolgrad-Aldeni variant) cultures. The grave inventory of the cemetery contains items made from flint, copper, and gold, in addition to the usual materials of the time such as bone, clay, shells, and leather. Three spiral bracelets made of copper, and other items dated 4500-4300 BC, that were found in Giurgiulesti, are exhibited in the
Moldova National Museum. Ancient DNA from Giurgiulesti is being analyzed by scientists. ==See also==