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Archaeologists Unearth A Rare Stone Age Hammer And Thousands Of Other Artifacts At A 9,000-Year-Old Settlement In Norway
Silje Hrstad/Museum of Cultural HistoryThis club head dates back 9,000 years and features a hole through the center that was likely drilled with animal bones.Archaeologists carrying out routine excavations ahead of the construction of a bike path in Horten, Norway, made a remarkable discovery that is rewriting Stone Age history. They unearthed thousands of artifacts, including a rare hammer, as well as a 9,000-year-old dwelling.These prehistoric objects are now giving researchers a better idea of when our ancestors began to transition from a nomadic hunter-gatherer society to a more settled lifestyle. Archaeologists Find 5,000 Prehistoric Artifacts During Routine ExcavationsThe club head may have been overlooked by the untrained eye. It appears to be a smooth, round stone, but it has a distinct hole drilled through the middle where it would have been attached to a shaft, archaeologist Silje Hrstad told Science Norway.Its unclear exactly how the hole was bored into the stone, but archaeologists suspect its maker used a bone with sharpened ends to slowly but surely drill through the rock. Hrstad also noted that the club head has light wear and crushing marks on one side, which suggests it was used as a tool. Some other club heads from the period feature more elaborate designs and were likely used for ceremonial purposes or as status symbols.Silje Hrstad/Museum of Cultural HistoryThe club head found at the site is not as elaborate as some other Stone Age tools.That wasnt the case for this specific artifact. It may have been used to pound something, like softening fibers, said Hrstad. Its essentially a Stone Age hammer.Alongside the club head, archaeologists unearthed some 5,000 other artifacts ranging from fishhooks and ax blades to tools made from quartz. Whats more, they uncovered a Stone Age dwelling that is helping them pinpoint when exactly Norwegian hunter-gatherers began to create more permanent settlements.Inside The Stone Age Hut Discovered At HortenThe remnants of a tiny hut measuring roughly 100 square feet smaller than a parking space were found at the highest point of the site. There was a stone fireplace in the center, suggesting it was a much more permanent dwelling than the tents typically used by hunter-gatherers.Nearby, closer to the shoreline, excavations uncovered a number of bones. Testing is ongoing, but the results will reveal which animals they belonged to and what types of tools were used to butcher them. Archaeologists also hope that charred hazelnuts discovered at the site will more precisely date the settlement. Steinar Kristensen/Museum of Cultural HistoryThe Horten excavation site in eastern Norway, just south of Oslo.All these finds point to a period of intense activity, enough to build up these layers of artifacts and bone remains, Hrstad said. As well as the fact that they invested resources in a solid house construction instead of just putting up a tent.Overall, the artifacts found at Horten are answering questions about a little-known time in Norwegian history. Early humans who had spent generations traveling from place to place to hunt and forage for food were beginning to settle down and spend more time in small communities, where they crafted tools, cooked meals, and paved the way for the development of larger societies.This is an incredibly interesting site, said Hrstad. Its like a little time capsule.After reading about the 9,000-year-old settlement discovered in Norway, learn about the Norse warriors known as Viking berserkers. Then, go inside Pyramiden, the abandoned Soviet mining town located on a Norwegian island.The post Archaeologists Unearth A Rare Stone Age Hammer And Thousands Of Other Artifacts At A 9,000-Year-Old Settlement In Norway appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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