Phoenicians mainly practiced cremation, a minority using inhumation. This shifted in the early 5th Century BCE to favouring inhumation.
tboli burial
Pagan practices are all those that are not Christian.
The people are now Muslims and Christians, and their burial practises depend on their religion.
Ancient Egyptian religion and burial practices focused on the belief in an afterlife and the preservation of the body through mummification. Coptic Christianity, which has its roots in early Christianity in Egypt, follows its own religious beliefs and burial traditions, including the use of rock-cut tombs. Islam, the dominant religion in contemporary Egypt, follows Islamic burial practices, which involve a simple burial with the body facing Mecca. Judaism has a long history in Egypt, and Jewish burial practices follow Jewish religious customs, including burial within 24 hours of death and without embalming. There are also small communities of Baha'is in Egypt who practice their own burial rituals, including burial in designated Baha'i cemeteries.
religion
King Tutankhamen
Yes, Jonathan Carver did write about Indian mounds and the Dakota Indian burial practices in his book "Travels through the Interior Parts of North America". He described various aspects of Dakota culture and their burial customs in the book.
homo-erectus were not as famous for their burials as for their discovery of fire
The people are now Muslims and Christians, and their burial practises depend on their religion.
Wealthy Eygptians preserved bodies as mummies
They were notorious for their habit of mating with the body after death, and the throwing it in the sea.
Tutankhamen.