Posted on 06/27/2012 3:00:46 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
An exciting find of an intact Bronze Age burial urn has been made by a team of archaeological experts working on the site of a new link road under construction at Lynn.
The team had already unearthed Iron Age timber posts beside the route of the road which will take traffic from the A149 Queen Elizabeth Way to Scania Way on the Hardwick Industrial Estate, where the new Sainsbury's superstore is being built.
Ken Hamilton, Norfolk County Council's senior historic environment officer, said now a collared urn, believed to contain cremated human remains from about 2,500 years ago, had been found.
The pot, which has a thick rim around it, has been removed from the site for further investigation.
Mr Hamilton said: "It is rare to find these urns complete and this one is quite unusual, so it is an exciting find.
"The inside of it is being excavated in a laboratory, as it was full of soil.
"This soil is being taken out slowly to work out if it was all from one deposition or whether it contained more than one individual's remains."
He said that after cremation, human remains would have been put in such pots and buried in small pits.
The discovery means there was almost certainly people living in that area during the Bronze Age and further archaeological exploration of the site is being carried out.
Mr Hamilton said: "This urn will find its way into Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service and a decision will be made on whether to display it in one of the museums.
"The team's findings will also be published in a report."
(Excerpt) Read more at lynnnews.co.uk ...
The 2,500-year-old collared burial pot as it was found in a pit on the site of a road being built at Lynn. The find is exciting archaeologists as it is rare to find one intact
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GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother & Ernest_at_the_Beach | |
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I'm sure a lot of people have lost their pot from time to time. |
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Interesting, but I like the gold hordes better. ;^)
Seriously, it is always amazing to me to see the craftmanship in ancient gold jewelry. I want to know what else these ancient ancestors of ours could make.
We all think we’re so smart, but there are probably not 1 in a million people who could craft jewelry and other decorations like some of these finds you have posted here. Remember the gold and lapis, or saphire, ring you posted a few days ago? 3000+ years old and prettier than anything in my local jewelry store.
The Lonely Lives of Experts...
Still waiting for the discovery of King John’s lost treasure in the Wash not too far from Kings Lynn.
"OK, so how about $300?"
But did they have a window to throw it out of?
;’)
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