Famous archaeological finds from your cunt.
Bolan:
1) Iron age town in Biskupin,
2) Bronocice pot, world's oldest evidence of wheel,
3) pic related.
Famous archaeological finds from your cunt.
Bolan:
1) Iron age town in Biskupin,
2) Bronocice pot, world's oldest evidence of wheel,
3) pic related.
Other urls found in this thread:
news.nationalgeographic.com
cosmosmagazine.com
en.wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
ancient-origins.net
museum-of-artifacts.blogspot.com
youtube.com
twitter.com
>The Antrea Net is one of the oldest known fishing nets in the world, found from Karelian isthmus in Antrea, in Korpilahti village in 1913. It is dated to 8540 BCE. The net is at display in the National Museum of Finland.
Ufff...Mexico is a paradise for archaeoligists
>pic related.
Is it Ancient Slav skull?
Plastic jug
For fuck's sake, America!
oldest boomerang in the world was discovered in my area
1,000 year old viking settlements at L'Anse aux Meadows
Is this common in other countries too? Mountains are full of this strange signs
And on top of mountains is full stuff like pic related
Indian mounds like Cahokia, cliff side Indian towns called Pueblos, Clovis man Paleolithic findings
This badboy
Mudfossils
MUDFOSSILS
Didn’t they have a guardrail?
It's that the one they sail to different events
Ancient hyperborean Canadian Übermenschen
Sutton Hoo, Saxon Burial ship.
No they're man made kek sometimes I pile rocks too to mantain the tradition t bh
How old are the oldest human traces in your country? Wiki says 150'000 years for Switzerland
World’s oldest map carved by some Grug upon mammoth tusk depicting hunting grounds near modern day village of Pavlov
>actual toilet head
oh no no no no no no no
So vikings could go up and down the boat quicker I think. Probably the same reason why its so flat ( so the boat can go closer to the coast)
Iron age tomb with pregnant polaks sawed with saw.
>a bunch of rocks stacked on top of eachother with holes in them
wow whites really did invent civilization!
pile of rocks are just a way to prove you've reached the top of a mountain imo. Those signs are 5-6000 years old. I mean Switzerland wasn't exactly the pinnacle of civilization back then lmao
Vinca?
Seems like a flat boat would fuck your shit if you went out into rough sea though, that's what fucked over the Mongols when they invaded Japan.
stone'enge
unfortunately the filthy scrub hippies have hijacked it as some 'sprirtual site' and use it as a place to huff bongs and poo in a Tesco bag twice a year because 'religion'.
>swordman of Janakkala (a man buried with two swords)
>dress of the mistress of Eura
>treasure of Halikko
I was here. There was a nigger guard who said that I should not touch some wooden cabinet.
what the fuck, that was meant to come back
Lots of swords.
Americans, everyone!
Ejem
I've seen these pre dynastic tombs too
it's some kind of moon calendar
No idea if its from the Vinca culture/period.
I think its called The Great Mother or something like that.
Pic related is an observatory
en.wikipedia.org
How do you not fall overboard on that damn thing
lascaux's cave.
18 000 years old drawings in a cave
Pharaoh Menmaatre Seti I father of Ramses II
Best preserved greek Apoxyomenos statue.
Neanderthal finds in Vindija cave/Krapina
Monkodonja hillfort
The Vučedol site near Vukovar, most famous for the Vučedol dove (the oldest dove figure found in Europe) and the Vučedol calendar
you RUINED it
Skulls impaled on poles from 8000 years ago.
you just sit down lol
Discovery of the Mayan city of Palenque
Gunwales are almost always quite low on multipurpose working ships. It makes working over the side (pulling nets up) easier, rowing more convenient, and creates less surface area that can be impacted by heavy winds, in a storm you want as low of a freeboard as possible.
Look at a modern Eastporter North Atlantic type fishing boat. It has a tall freeboard at the bow but the aft working deck has very small or sometimes no gunwales, just a lip with scuppers.
This dude was found near where i grew up. Tons of other bog bodies from the iron age and other cool iron age stuff in the area.
They found this big iron age mass grave where boys as young as 13 were found with battlewounds so they are thinking its like a last stand against the invaders. Hundreds of sword and shield were deliberately destroyed and thrown in the bog, and the bodies where left to rot until some years later when the conquering people put the bones in all sorts of weird positions like pelvic bones on a stick, and then threw it in another bog.
Frozen wooly mammoth
Denisovans were discovered
Princess of Ukok
Bunch of dinosaurs
Some settlements like the Arkaim
Remember you are replying to an american.
A woman carved in a tusk
First evidence of brain surgery too if I recall
might be
From the 4th century
From the 7th century
It was from southern Russia if i recall
en.wikipedia.org
This might be somewhat interesting underwater secret pathways in swamps used against Teutonics and other wars.
>Undetectable from the surface, these roads were usually known only to the locals, and as such were an important element of the defense against various invaders, including the Teutonic Knights in the 13–14th centuries. Kūlgrindas provided a safe shortcut between villages, hillforts, and other defensive structures.[3] They were built by bringing stones, wood, or gravel over frozen swamps in the winter and letting them sink once the ice melted.[4] Such procedure would be repeated several times. Sometimes wooden posts were inserted to protect the elevated area from washing away.
An intact Roman chariot, complete with ornaments, from the 4th century
Here in Visby they have found thousands of armours, weapons and skeletons from the battle of Visby and other wars. Some of the most well preserved finds in the world.
And one of the few places were mass graves have been filled with dead soldiers without removing their armour, hundreds upon hundreds of fully dressed skeletons were found just outside the city walls.
ancient-origins.net
museum-of-artifacts.blogspot.com
Scythian golden deer from the 5th century BC
And on the 16th of July 1999, the world's largest Viking silver treasure, the Spillings Hoard, was found in a field at Spillings farm here on Gotland.
It consisted mostly of coins, about 14,000, from foreign countries, many Islamic. It also contained about 20 kg (44 lb) of bronze objects along with numerous everyday objects such as nails, glass beads, parts of tools, pottery, iron bands and clasp not to mention hundreds of viking bracelets made from silver.
And besides that, more than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb) of silver from over 700 hidden caches deposited between the 9th and 12th centuries has been found on the island.
It never ends here, the finds just keeps piling up every single time someone goes out and digs a hole.
We have Dolmes. That's about it until like 1500 (AC)
Korea
Rice
>World's 'oldest' rice found
By Dr David Whitehouse
BBC News Online science editor
>Oldest domesticated rice
Rice was on the menu for ancient man
Scientists have found the oldest known domesticated rice. The handful of 15,000-year-old burnt grains was discovered by archaeologists in Korea.
Their age challenges the accepted view that rice cultivation originated in China about 12,000 years ago.
The rice is genetically different from the modern food crop, which will allow researchers to trace its evolution.
Today's rice is the primary food for over half the world's population, with 576,280,000 tonnes produced in 2002.
Rice is especially important in Asia, where it is responsible for almost a third of all calorific intake.
Tracer of evolution
The oldest known rice was discovered by Lee Yung-jo and Woo Jong-yoon of Chungbuk National University in South Korea.
Oldest domesticated rice
The rice DNA will aid evolution study
They found the ancient grains during excavations in the village of Sorori in the Chungbuk Province.
Radioactive dating of the 59 grains of carbonised rice has pushed back the date for the earliest known cultivation of the plant.
DNA analysis shows the early rice sample to be different from the modern intensively farmed varieties, thereby offering scientists the opportunity to study the evolution of one of the world's principal food sources.
The region in central Korea where the grains were found is one of the most important sites for understanding the development of Stone Age man in Asia.
6th century Buddha statue
550 - 793 Vendel Period
Lol
>Ufff