
thumb|280px|Garlanded bucrania on a frieze from the Samothrace temple complex
thumb|280px|Garlanded bucrania on a frieze from the Samothrace temple complex
Bucranium (; , , referring to the skull of an ox) was a form of carved decoration commonly used in Classical architecture. The name is generally considered to originate with the practice of displaying garlanded, sacrificial oxen, whose heads were displayed on the walls of temples, a practice dating back to the sophisticated Neolithic site of Çatalhöyük in eastern Anatolia, where cattle skulls were overlaid with white plaster.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).