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Saturday, August 11, 2012

More Details on "Sacred Tree" and Related (?) Burial


Associated Press in Mexico City
  • guardian.co.uk,
  • Mexican archaeologists discover 'unprecedented' Aztec burial

    Skeleton of young woman surrounded by hundreds of human bones found five metres beneath Templo Mayor in Mexico City
    Mexican archaeologists say they have found an unprecedented human burial in which the skeleton of a young woman is surrounded by piles of 1,789 human bones in Mexico City's Templo Mayor.

    Researchers found the burial about five metres (15ft) below the surface, next to the remains of what may have been a sacred tree at one edge of the plaza, the most sacred site of the Aztec capital. The National Institute of Anthropology and History said the find was the first of its kind, noting the Aztecs were not known to use mass sacrifice or the reburial of bones for the interment of a member of the ruling class.

    University of Florida archaeologist Susan Gillespie, who was not involved in the project, called the find "unprecedented for the Aztec culture". She said on Tuesday that when the Mayas interred sacrifice victims with royal burials, but they were usually found as complete bodies. And, except for special circumstances, the Aztecs, unlike other pre-Hispanic cultures, usually cremated members of the elite during their rule from 1325 to the Spanish conquest in 1521.

    "Although the bodies of sacrificial victims have been found in burials of elite persons in Mesoamerica going back to at least the preclassic period, funerary deposits for Aztec elites have only rarely been encountered," said Gillespie.

    The institute said some of the bones showed what may be cut marks to the sternum or vertebrae, places where a ritual heart extraction might leave a mark, but added that it did not seem likely the dead were sacrificed on the spot to accompany the burial because their bones were found separated.
    The researchers discovered the skulls of seven adults and three children in one pile, long bones including femurs in another grouping, and ribs in another.

    The physical anthropologist Perla Ruiz, who was in charge of the dig, said that might suggest the bones were disinterred from previous burials and reburied with the woman. While some pre-Hispanic cultures disinterred bones as part of ancestor worship, it is not clear the Aztecs did.

    The burial dates to about 1481-1486, based on the "stage" of temple buildings at which they were found. The Templo Mayor, like many sites, was rebuilt by successive generations, one stage atop another.

    Another unusual finding was the sacred tree, actually a rather battered oak trunk found planted on a small, round platform near the burial at what would have been the edge of the temple complex. It may be a couple of decades older than the burial.

    The Aztecs, like other pre-Hispanic cultures, venerated trees, believing they had spiritual importance.
    Institute archaeologist Raúl Barrera said it may be related to the four sacred trees the Aztecs believed held up the sky, but Gillespie noted it could also have been a tree or trunk brought in for an annual ceremony.

    "It seems to have been positioned there for a span of time, perhaps for a special ceremony or to create a particular vision of a sacred landscape, but then abandoned as uses of that limited sacred space changed over time," Gillespie said.

    Barrera said the tree trunk appeared to have been split, perhaps intentionally.

    Pre-Columbian "Sacred Tree" Burial Discovered in Mexico

    A sacred tree burial, heh?  Interesting, very interesting.  Refer to our research on Sacred Places/Sacred Spaces at Goddesschess Discussion Group at Delphi Forums, for instance, for "vintage" discussions!

    Article from Fox News Latino.

    Pre-Columbian "sacred tree" found in Mexico



    Mexican archaeologists discovered a pre-Columbian grave containing human skeletal remains along with relics of a "sacred tree" near the archaeological site of the Great Temple of Tenochtitlan in the historical downtown area of Mexico City, the Mexican National Anthropology and History Institute, or INAH, said.

    Found in the burial ground dating back more than 500 years were the complete skeleton of a woman and over a thousand human bones of children, young people and adults.

    The discovery is "the only one of its kind" from the Mexica culture, the archaeologist heading INAH's Urban Archaeological Program, Raul Barrera Rodriguez, said.

    Though other multiple burials have been found in the past, "this is the first where the skeleton of an adult is accompanied by bones and bone fragments from humans of different ages," Barrera said.

    Apart from the grave, the specialists found a circular structure of red volcanic rock with a tree trunk in its center that, according to the archaeologists, "would be one of the sacred trees" associated with the god of war Huitzilopochtli, one of the chief figures in Mexica cosmogony and one of the deities to whom the Great Temple was dedicated.

    The discoveries occurred in an area called Manuel Gamio Plaza in the course of building an access corridor to the archaeological site and to the museum of the Great Temple, the INAH said.

    The skeletal remains were found at about 5 meters (16 feet) under street level, and were beneath a floor of basalt slabs laid at a stage of the Great Temple of Tenochtitlan's construction between the years 1481 and 1486, so that the mass grave dates back to that time, Barrera said.

    "The complete skeleton was found on the west side of the burial site, while the rest of the bones were placed around it, some of them grouped in small compositions, particularly in the case of ribs and femurs," Barrera said. EFE

    *********************************************************

    So, what does this mean?  Were the bones of others buried around the woman for a particular reason?  Were the bones buried at the same time as the woman was, or afterward?  Over a long time span or a short time span?  Who was the woman?  And is there a relationship to the remains of the Sacred Tree?

    2012 Canadian Closed Chess Championship (Zonal)

    While the Canadian ladies were leaving their national championship (a zonal) like a Plague of Locusts had descended upon the playing venue  (FOUR players left before the final round - yep, FOUR!), the chess dudes were battling in the National Closed (also a zonal) for a spot in the 2013 World Cup and the money it promises, even if you get knocked out in the first round.  It's the same thing with the Canadian's women's representative who will be making an appearing at the 2012 FIDE Women's World Chess Championship in Siberia Russia (I'm NOT kidding - it's going to be in SIBERIA!)  Even if a player does not advance very far in the rounds because of the knock-out format utilized, there is a generous prize structure so players at these events do not come home empty-handed.

    You can read all of the details about the Women's Championship/Zonal at the special pages I put up for the 2012 Goddesschess Canadian Women's Chess Championship -- you can find the links near the top of the home page in the left hand column. 

    Here are the final standings for the Canadian Chess Championship (Zonal):

    Grille américaine finale après la ronde 9 .

    Rg.NameELOFED1.Rd2.Rd3.Rd4.Rd5.Rd6.Rd7.Rd8.Rd9.RdPts.
    1GMSAMBUEV Bator2523CAN20w116b112w13b12w110b115w111b14w½8.5
    2GMKOVALYOV Anton2605CAN14b½33w113b14w11b011w112b13w15b½7.0
    3IMNORITSYN Nikolay2472CAN27b117w111b11w015b014w18b12b010w16.0
    4IMGERZHOY Leonid2448CAN6w126b18w½2b012w½16b½17w115b11b½6.0
    5FMWANG Richard2338CAN21b022w114b17w½18b115w½10w½16b12w½6.0
    6CMGUSEV Nikita2117CAN4b025w117b½30w126b½8w024b114w112b16.0
    7FMHAMILTON Robert2305CAN28w130b½10w½5b½13w020b19b118w½8b½5.5
    8QIN Zi Yi (joey)2198CAN31b115w14b½11w½10w06b13w017b17w½5.5
    9HUMPHREYS Michael2179CAN36w111w028b020b½23w119b17w026w118b15.5
    10IMHEBERT Jean2410CAN35b113w½7b½26w18b11w05b½12w½3b05.0
    11FMJIANG Louie2337CAN19w19b13w08b½28w12b026b11w013b½5.0
    12FMPECHENKIN Vladimir2334CAN22b121w11b027w14b½13w12w010b½6w05.0
    13KRAIOUCHKINE Nikita2204CAN29w110b½2w032w17b112b016w028b111w½5.0
    14SONG Michael2154CAN2w½18b½5w024b119w13b027w16b021w15.0
    15IMPANJWANI Raja2394CAN32w18b030w119b13w15b½1b04w0-04.5
    16FMMILICEVIC Goran2287CAN23b11w027b021w122b14w½13b15w0-04.5
    17FMKHASSANOV Marat2273CAN24w13b06w½28b½27w½33b14b08w029b14.5
    18MASSE Hugues2232CAN33b½14w½32b½23w15w027b½20w17b½9w04.5
    19DERRAUGH Geordie2097CAN11b036w135b115w014b09w025b130w122b½4.5
    20CARRIER Claude2154CAN1b023w½33b½9w½30b17w018b031w½32b14.0
    21ROBICHAUD Louis2100CAN5w112b026w016b025w½23b½33w124w114b04.0
    22FILIPOVICH David2091CAN12w05b031w134b116w029b½30w½27b½19w½4.0
    23ANASTASOVSKI Nikola2070CAN16w020b½29w118b09b021w½32w0-133b14.0
    24ITKIN David2058CAN17b027w036b114w034w132b16w021b028w14.0
    25ZHU Hong Rui2029CAN26b06b034w035w121b½31b½19w033w130b14.0
    26CHABOT Roland2231CAN25w14w021b110b06w½28b111w09b0-03.5
    27LAROCHELLE Martial2153CAN3w024b116w112b017b½18w½14b022w½-03.5
    28PREOTU Razvan2080CAN7b034b19w117w½11b026w029b113w024b03.5
    29LUO Zhao Yang1991CAN13b035w½23b033w½36b122w½28w032b117w03.5
    30OUSSEDIK Elias2005CAN34w17w½15b06b020w035w122b½19b025w03.0
    31LEUTSCHAFT Martin2143CAN8w032b022b036w½35b½25w½-120b½-03.0
    32CHIKU-RATTE Olivier Kenta2107CAN15b031w118w½13b033b024w023b129w020w02.5
    33UPPER John2036CAN18w½2b020w½29b½32w117w021b025b023w02.5
    34BOLDUC Steve2229CAN30b028w025b122w024b0-0-0-0-01.0
    35BER Yves2114CAN10w029b½19w025b031w½30b0-0-0-01.0

    I believe there are some people who are saying I am being too harsh, that players leave tournaments all the time.  Yeah, right.  They walk out on national championships all the time?  Not that I've read about.  Of course, I have not read every single thing ever printed or written about every single national championship that has been held since the world began until this very instant, so I must qualify my indignation with that caveat.  Dudes - if you can't handle not making a "reputable" score, why did you sign up to begin with, knowing what the level of competition was going to be?  I know that things happen, but walking out on a national championship just because you don't like your score -- well, that's just bogus.

    Same question for the ladies. 

    I know of only one instance where there are what I consider extenuating circumstances that justified a player leaving before the Women's Championship was completed.  Perhaps there are others.  But - really - come on, people.  Show a little respect for the institutions - for the titles you were allegedly playing for!

    Special Travelling Exhibition Upcoming at China Institute

    Looks fabulous!  List of Travelling Exhibitions

    Dunhuang:
    Buddhist Art at the Gateway of the Silk Road

    China Institute Gallery February 7—June 9, 2013
    Seated Buddha
    Tang dynasty (618–907)
    Clay
    25 ⅕ x 11 ⅖ x 7 ⅞ inches (64 × 29 × 20 cm)
    Dunhuang Academy
    Situated at a major crossroads of the ancient Silk Road, Dunhuang is one of the world’s most esteemed cultural heritage sites. Dunhuang: Buddhist Art at the Gateway of the Silk Road brings into vivid focus the customs and practices of local Buddhists and illuminates the significance of the city as a crucial point of cultural exchange between East and West. Featuring sculpture, painted clay reliefs, calligraphy, Buddhist scriptures, and modeled bricks from the caves, this exhibition introduces the art and ritual practices from the golden eras of the Northern Wei and Tang dynasties. The diverse cultural history at Dunhuang is reflected in the evolution of the motifs and styles at work in these paintings and sculptures, and the crucial intersections of secular and religious, national and international, and East and West are revealed in these exceptional artifacts.
    This exhibition is organized by China Institute Gallery and the Dunhuang Academy. It is curated by Fan Jinshi, Director of the Dunhuang Academy.

    Friday, August 10, 2012

    4500 Year Old Ivory Statuettes Excavated in Portugal

    Archaeologists find 4,500-year-old ivory statuettes

    by TPN/ Lusa, in General · 09-08-2012 15:35:00 ·
     
    About 20 ivory statuettes estimated to be around 4,500 years old have been discovered in an archaeological dig in eastern Portugal, a first in the country, archaeologist António Valério said this week.
    "This is the first time pieces with such characteristics have appeared in Portugal", Valério told Lusa News Agency, adding that similar finds had been made earlier in southern Spain. He said the statuettes appeared to be funeral objects as they were discovered in an area of the Perdigões archaeological complex which had been used for cremations between the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age.

    He dated the pieces to the middle of the third millennium BC, making them some 4,500 years old.

    2012 FIDE World Junior Championships (Girls)

    Rank after Round 8

    Rk. NameFEDRtgPts. TB1
    1
    WGMZiaziulkina NastassiaBLR23426.516264
    2
    WIMBulmaga IrinaROU23806.016263
    3
    WGMGuo QiCHN23586.016190
    4
    WGMCori T DeysiPER24136.015920
    5
    WIMArabidze MeriGEO23796.015787
    6
    WGMGoryachkina AleksandraRUS23616.015484
    7
    IMBodnaruk AnastasiaRUS24145.516212
    8
    WGMVojinovic JovanaMNE23375.516060
    9
    WIMKulkarni BhaktiIND21595.515337
    10
    WFMMedina Warda AuliaINA22185.514996
    11
    WGMKashlinskaya AlinaRUS23915.016075
    12
    WGMMona KhaledEGY21215.015528
    13
    Wang JueCHN23555.015526
    14
    WIMVarga KlaraHUN21815.015392
    15
    WIMSihite Chelsie MonicaINA21625.015196
    16
    WFMPetrova IrinaUKR21735.015150
    17
    WIMSchut LisaNED23055.015001
    18
    WFMDe Seroux CamilleSUI21015.014771
    19
    Iordanidou ZoiGRE21665.014637
    20
    WIMSemenova ElenaRUS21345.014388
    21
    WIMAbdulla KhayalaAZE22175.014322
    22
    WFMKulon KlaudiaPOL22594.515958
    23
    WCMCemhan KardelenTUR19384.515543
    24
    Ivekovic AnaCRO19594.515443
    25
    WIMRodriguez Rueda Paula AndreaCOL21964.515306
    26
    Manelidou MariaGRE20564.514914
    27
    WIMAbdumalik ZhansayaKAZ21934.514100
    28
    Anusca Madalina-MariaROU20794.514099
    29
    Klek Hanna-MarieGER22484.015246
    30
    Batkovskyte DominykaLTU20964.015121
    31
    Nonkovic BogdanaSRB19504.015084
    32
    Serefidou DespinaGRE18654.015081
    33
    WFMLiao SimoneUSA19334.015047
    34
    WCMOrozco Lina YomayraCOL21504.014976
    35
    Nevioselaya MariaBLR20574.014739
    36
    WFMOsmak IulijaUKR21714.014602
    37
    Sargsyan ShushannaARM20474.014529
    38
    WIMPon NkrithikaIND21194.014397
    39
    WIMPavlidou EkateriniGRE22374.014133
    40
    Ibrahimova SabinaAZE20913.515354
    41
    Imeeva AisaRUS20953.514844
    42
    Galunova TsvetaBUL20913.514645
    43
    Owens Megan RWLS18163.514568
    44
    WFMIvana Maria FurtadoIND21023.514447
    45
    Kalaydina Regina VeronickaCAN19283.514403
    46
    Vatkali DimitraGRE19363.514369
    47
    Messam-Sparks LateefahENG19473.014788
    48
    Chiarion ElisaITA19783.014752
    49
    WCMNarva TriinEST20283.014686
    50
    Unapkoshvili NaniGEO20113.014614
    51
    Dominguez GisellaARG18313.014461
    52
    Lefevre MargauxFRA20433.014396
    53
    WFMFrey AlisaGER20353.014253
    54
    Forsa EliseNOR18363.014047
    55
    Medeiros Thauane FerreiraBRA18553.013917
    56
    York-Andersen AnnaENG18283.013797
    57
    Terzidaki AlexandraGRE19583.013480
    58
    WFMKolaric SpelaSLO20712.514242
    59
    Edes ZsofiaSVK20812.514131
    60
    Sena Moura DanielleBRA18762.514063
    61
    Tuzi BrunaALB15462.513558
    62
    Bucar NatasaSLO20222.513448
    63
    Lolici Iselin-AmandaROU19672.014575
    64
    Koutsogiannopoulou TheodoraGRE18972.014373
    65
    Psofimi MiliaGRE14371.013451
    66
    Kurbonboyeva Sarvinoz21430.00.0
    Annotation:
    Tie Break1: Rtg Sum (without lowest rtg) or Progressive Score (Youth WCC)

    2012 Russian Women's Chess Championship

    Information from The Week in Chess.  Results for last 2 rounds:
    Round 6 (August 9, 2012)
    Pogonina, Natalija- Galliamova, Alisa½-½44B43Sicilian Paulsen
    Kosintseva, Tatiana- Kovanova, Baira1-044C96Ruy Lopez
    Gunina, Valentina- Ubiennykh, Ekaterina0-145E69King's Indian Fianchetto
    Charochkina, Daria- Kosintseva, Nadezhda½-½76C45Scotch Game
    Ovod, Evgenija- Girya, Olga0-175D31Semi-Slav Defence
    Round 7 (August 10, 2012)
    Girya, Olga- Pogonina, Natalija0-148D58Queens Gambit Tartakover
    Galliamova, Alisa- Gunina, Valentina0-132E70King's Indian Fianchetto
    Kosintseva, Nadezhda- Ovod, Evgenija1-071C65Ruy Lopez Berlin
    Kovanova, Baira- Charochkina, Daria0-162D15Slav Defence
    Ubiennykh, Ekaterina- Kosintseva, Tatiana0-146A07Barcza System

    Pogonina, Round 10.  From official website (in Russian Cyrillic). 


    Current standings:

    62nd ch-RUS w Moscow (RUS), 3-13 viii 2012cat. VIII (2445)
    1234567890
    1.Pogonina, NatalijawgRUS2448*111½.½.½12669
    2.Kosintseva, TatianagRUS25300*1.½½.11152595
    3.Girya, OlgawgRUS243300*..½11112537
    4.Gunina, ValentinamRUS25070..*11½½0142476
    5.Galliamova, AlisamRUS2465½½.0*.1½½142483
    6.Kosintseva, NadezhdagRUS2524.½½0.*½½1142481
    7.Charochkina, DariawgRUS2353½.0½0½*1.02355
    8.Kovanova, BairawgRUS2408.00½½½0*1.2352
    9.Ubiennykh, EkaterinawmRUS2367½001½0.0*.22315
    10.Ovod, EvgenijamRUS24190000001..*12156

    Tuesday, August 7, 2012

    Eight Times More Powerful Than Krakatoa...

    I can't even begin to imagine the POWER of a volcanic eruption that was EIGHT TIMES MORE POWERFUL THAN KRAKATOA!  The results to London's population at the time were catastrophic.  Imagine losing a quarter or more of the people who used to live all around you...

    And this was probably occuring all around the world.  But in the late 1200's record-keeping may have been hit or miss, some populations may have lost their literate compatriots (priests and monks, for instance).  Who knows?  Perhaps if historians begin to dig through what records are available, they will find written evidence for this climate-changing eruption. 

    Mass grave in London reveals how volcano caused global catastrophe

    Scientists search for the explosive source of a disaster that wiped out almost a third of Londoners in 1258
    Dalya Alberge
  • The Observer,

  • When archaeologists discovered thousands of medieval skeletons in a mass burial pit in east London in the 1990s, they assumed they were 14th-century victims of the Black Death or the Great Famine of 1315-17. Now they have been astonished by a more explosive explanation – a cataclysmic volcano that had erupted a century earlier, thousands of miles away in the tropics, and wrought havoc on medieval Britons.

    Scientific evidence – including radiocarbon dating of the bones and geological data from across the globe – shows for the first time that mass fatalities in the 13th century were caused by one of the largest volcanic eruptions of the past 10,000 years.

    Such was the size of the eruption that its sulphurous gases would have released a stratospheric aerosol veil or dry fog that blocked out sunlight, altered atmospheric circulation patterns and cooled the Earth's surface. It caused crops to wither, bringing famine, pestilence and death.

    deaths required capacious burial pits, as recorded in contemporary accounts. In 1258, a monk reported: "The north wind prevailed for several months… scarcely a small rare flower or shooting germ appeared, whence the hope of harvest was uncertain... Innumerable multitudes of poor people died, and their bodies were found lying all about swollen from want… Nor did those who had homes dare to harbour the sick and dying, for fear of infection… The pestilence was immense – insufferable; it attacked the poor particularly. In London alone 15,000 of the poor perished; in England and elsewhere thousands died."

    There does not seem to have been any explanation at the time; it was probably assumed to be a punishment from God. London's population at the time was around 50,000, so the loss of 15,000 would have radically changed the city.

    Surprisingly, perhaps, the volcano's exact location has yet to be established. Mexico, Ecuador and Indonesia are the most likely areas, according to vulcanologists, who found evidence in ice cores from the northern hemisphere and Antarctic and within a thick layer of ash from Lake Malawi sediments. The ice core sulphate concentration shows that it was up to eight times higher than Indonesia's Krakatoa eruption of 1883, one of the most catastrophic in history.

    Some 10,500 medieval skeletons were found at Spitalfields market, the site of the Augustinian priory and hospital of St Mary Spital, and the remains suggest there may have been as many as 18,000. The excavation between 1991 and 2007 by the Museum of London Archaeology (Mola) was the largest ever archaeological investigation in the capital. It was a member of that team, osteologist Don Walker, who discovered the link with a volcano. The findings will be revealed in Mola's report, to be published on Monday.

    Vulcanologist Bill McGuire said: "This was the biggest eruption in historic times. It may have brought the temperatures down by 4C, a huge amount."

    The Comments section is equally interesting and informative.

    2012 FIDE World Juniors Chess Championship (Girls)

    Please visit Chessdom's coverage of this FIDE Championship - they are doing a great job!

    Rank after Round 6

    Rk.NameFEDRtgPts.TB1
    1
    WIMBulmaga IrinaROU23805.011459
    2
    WGMZiaziulkina NastassiaBLR23424.511654
    3
    IMBodnaruk AnastasiaRUS24144.511611
    4
    WGMVojinovic JovanaMNE23374.511451
    5
    WGMGuo QiCHN23584.511438
    6
    WFMKulon KlaudiaPOL22594.511385
    7
    WGMKashlinskaya AlinaRUS23914.511337
    8
    WGMCori T DeysiPER24134.511203
    9
    WGMGoryachkina AleksandraRUS23614.510945
    10
    WIMRodriguez Rueda Paula AndreaCOL21964.510627
    11
    WIMArabidze MeriGEO23794.011270
    12
    Wang JueCHN23554.011026
    13
    WCMCemhan KardelenTUR19384.011020
    14
    Klek Hanna-MarieGER22484.010944
    15
    WGMMona KhaledEGY21214.010925
    16
    WIMKulkarni BhaktiIND21594.010912
    17
    WIMSchut LisaNED23054.010800
    18
    WIMVarga KlaraHUN21814.010783
    19
    WIMSihite Chelsie MonicaINA21624.010760
    20
    Ivekovic AnaCRO19593.511174
    21
    WFMMedina Warda AuliaINA22183.510951
    22
    Ibrahimova SabinaAZE20913.510944
    23
    WFMPetrova IrinaUKR21733.510886
    24
    Batkovskyte DominykaLTU20963.510821
    25
    Imeeva AisaRUS20953.510570
    26
    Iordanidou ZoiGRE21663.510382
    27
    WIMSemenova ElenaRUS21343.510342
    28
    WCMOrozco Lina YomayraCOL21503.011079
    29
    WFMLiao SimoneUSA19333.010881
    30
    Nonkovic BogdanaSRB19503.010800
    31
    Manelidou MariaGRE20563.010740
    32
    Nevioselaya MariaBLR20573.010722
    33
    WFMDe Seroux CamilleSUI21013.010653
    34
    Messam-Sparks LateefahENG19473.010537
    35
    WFMOsmak IulijaUKR21713.010473
    36
    Dominguez GisellaARG18313.010357
    37
    WCMNarva TriinEST20283.010278
    38
    WIMPon NkrithikaIND21193.010247
    39
    WIMAbdulla KhayalaAZE22173.010112
    40
    Anusca Madalina-MariaROU20793.09941
    41
    Serefidou DespinaGRE18652.510787
    42
    Chiarion ElisaITA19782.510785
    43
    Galunova TsvetaBUL20912.510708
    44
    WFMIvana Maria FurtadoIND21022.510297
    45
    WIMPavlidou EkateriniGRE22372.510167
    46
    Vatkali DimitraGRE19362.510154
    47
    WIMAbdumalik ZhansayaKAZ21932.510073
    48
    Unapkoshvili NaniGEO20112.010850
    49
    Sargsyan ShushannaARM20472.010707
    50
    Lolici Iselin-AmandaROU19672.010692
    51
    Lefevre MargauxFRA20432.010505
    52
    WFMFrey AlisaGER20352.010491
    53
    Owens Megan RWLS18162.010465
    54
    Koutsogiannopoulou TheodoraGRE18972.010380
    55
    Edes ZsofiaSVK20812.010372
    56
    Kalaydina Regina VeronickaCAN19282.010311
    57
    WFMKolaric SpelaSLO20712.010275
    58
    Forsa EliseNOR18362.010181
    59
    Terzidaki AlexandraGRE19582.09540
    60
    Sena Moura DanielleBRA18761.510277
    61
    Medeiros Thauane FerreiraBRA18551.510253
    62
    York-Andersen AnnaENG18281.59943
    63
    Bucar NatasaSLO20221.59696
    64
    Psofimi MiliaGRE14371.010050
    65
    Tuzi BrunaALB15461.010050
    66
    Kurbonboyeva Sarvinoz21430.00.0
    Annotation:
    Tie Break1: Rtg Sum (without lowest rtg) or Progressive Score (Youth WCC)