Posted on 01/23/2018 6:09:22 PM PST by mairdie
More than 2,000 remarkably well-preserved hunting artefacts have emerged from melting ice in Norway's highest mountains, dating as far back as 4000 BC.
The incredible finds were made by 'glacial archaeologists' in Jotunheimen and the surrounding areas of Oppland, which include Norways highest mountains.
They looked at the edge of the contracting ice and recovered artefacts of wood, textile, hide and other organic materials.
Included in the archaeologists' haul is a ski with preserved binding from 700 AD - only the second one to be preserved globally - as well as a Bronze Age shoe from 1300 BC.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
I had a tooth go bad and it recalcified down through the root. It only hurt for a small portion of the time it was doing that. Now it is a root canal tooth.
I am so deeply sorry for what you went through, and hope that the glee is back in more than just your name.
Hey, not to worry, the tooth thing was 20 years ago. There is plenty of glee in my life. My point is that nature was apparently healing the tooth on it’s own, but only some, not too severe, pain sent me to the dentist for treatment. I wonder if anthropologists find such natural healing of deep cavities in the teeth of their finds.
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