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Viking Boat Burial Discovery 'A First'

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posted on Oct, 18 2011 @ 08:33 PM
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Ardnamurchan Viking boat burial discovery 'a first'

The UK mainland's first fully intact Viking boat burial site has been uncovered in the north-west Highlands, archaeologists have said.

The site, at Ardnamurchan, is thought to be more than 1,000 years old.

Artefacts buried alongside the Viking in his boat suggest he was a high-ranking warrior.

Archaeologist Dr Hannah Cobb said the "artefacts and preservation make this one of the most important Norse graves ever excavated in Britain".

Dr Cobb, from the University of Manchester, a co-director of the project, said: "This is a very exciting find."

She has been excavating artefacts in Ardnamurchan for six years.

The universities of Manchester, Leicester, Newcastle and Glasgow worked on, identified, or funded the excavation.



Archaeology Scotland and East Lothian-based CFA Archaeology have also been involved in the project which led to the find.

The term "fully-intact", used to describe the find, means the remains of the body along with objects buried with it and evidence of the boat used were found and recovered.

The Ardnamurchan Viking was found buried with an axe, a sword with a decorated hilt, a spear, a shield boss and a bronze ring pin.

About 200 rivets - the remains of the boat he was laid in - were also found.

Previously, boat burials in such a condition have been excavated at sites on Orkney.

Until now mainland excavations were only partially successful and had been carried out before more careful and accurate methods were introduced.

Other finds in the 5m-long (16ft) grave in Ardnamurchan included a knife, what could be the tip of a bronze drinking horn, a whetstone from Norway, a ring pin from Ireland and Viking pottery.
'The icing'

Dozens of pieces of iron yet to be identified were also found at the site.

The finds were made as part of the Ardnamurchan Transition Project (ATP) which has been examining social change in the area from the first farmers 6,000 years ago to the Highland Clearances of the 18th and 19th centuries.

Viking specialist Dr Colleen Batey, from the University of Glasgow, has said the boat was likely to be from the 10th Century AD.

Dr Oliver Harris, project co-director from the University of Leicester's School of Archaeology and Ancient History, reinforced the importance of the burial site.

He said: "In previous seasons our work has examined evidence of changing beliefs and life styles in the area through a study of burial practices in the Neolithic and Bronze age periods 6,000-4,500 years ago and 4,500 to 2,800 years ago respectively.

"It has also yielded evidence for what will be one of the best-dated Neolithic chambered cairns in Scotland when all of our post-excavation work is complete.

"But the find we reveal today has got to be the icing on the cake."



The Ardnamurchan area marked (A)

link to story > www.bbc.co.uk...



posted on Oct, 18 2011 @ 08:41 PM
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I don't personally find archaeology very exciting,
but the story made me think about Shield Sheafson's funeral boat from Beowulf

The characters probably didn't really exist, but it's fun to think.



posted on Oct, 18 2011 @ 08:46 PM
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Great Thread.
I have always been interested in this because my family originated from there,I think.

At dusk on a summer’s evening in the year 795 AD, a sinister looking high-prowed ship ploughed into the sands at Lambay Island just north of Howth Head on the east coast of Ireland near Dublin. Immediately from the body of the Longboat, the oarsmen rushed to attack the monastery of Saint Columkill. They slaughtered the monks, plundered the monastery for for all the gold and silver vessels they could find, and then disappeared back into the Irish Sea. The Irish Annalists, referring to the incident, describe the unwelcome arrivals as "dubh-ghaill". The first "Doyles" had arrived in Ireland! This was the beginning of more than two centuries of attack and invasion which had devastating effect on Ireland, and on the Irish monasteries in particular.


I wonder if they are related somehow.

www.doyle.com.au...
edit on 18-10-2011 by kdog1982 because: (no reason given)



posted on Oct, 19 2011 @ 09:15 AM
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More pics in this Article > www.dailymail.co.uk... <

From this thread > www.abovetopsecret.com... <





posted on Oct, 19 2011 @ 10:14 PM
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Makes me want to become an archaeoligist.

Imagine discovering such ancient artifacts!

Who knows what else is hidden away under the earth's surface waiting to be found.



posted on Oct, 20 2011 @ 10:27 AM
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reply to post by Realm52
 


Ah, all kinds of things - there are tens of thousands known sites, many more that have been partially looted and 'x' number of sites no one has surveyed or even considered yet.

I suggest a career in one of the technical aspects of archaeology or as a maritime (underwater) archaeology specialist



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