Anthropology
Related: About this forumScientists found an amazingly well-preserved village from 3,000 years ago
Story by Adela Suliman 8mo 5 min read
LONDON A half-eaten bowl of porridge complete with wooden spoon, communal rubbish bins, and a decorative necklace made with amber and glass beads are just a handful of the extraordinarily well-preserved remnants of a late Bronze Age hamlet unearthed in eastern England thats been dubbed Britains Pompeii and a time capsule into village life almost 3,000 years ago.
The findings from the site, excavated in 2015 to 2016, are now the subject of two reports, complete with previously unseen photos, published this week by University of Cambridge archaeologists, who said they cast light onto the cosy domesticity of ancient settlement life.
It might be the best prehistoric settlement that weve found in Britain, Mark Knight, the excavation director and a co-author of the reports, said in an interview Thursday. We took the roofs off and inside was pretty much the contents, he said. Its so comprehensive and so coherent.
The reason for the rare preservation: disaster.
The settlement, thought to have originally consisted of several large roundhouses made of wood and constructed on stilts above a slow-moving river, was engulfed by a fire less than a year after being built.
During the blaze, the buildings and much of their contents collapsed into a muddy river below that cushioned the scorched remains where they fell, the university said of the findings. This combination of charring from the fire and waterlogging led to exceptional preservation, the researchers found.
Because of the nature of the settlement, that it was burned down and its abandonment unplanned, everything was captured, Knight added.
More:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/scientists-found-an-amazingly-well-preserved-village-from-3-000-years-ago/ar-BB1kiwTt
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(136,868 posts)FirstLight
(14,312 posts)I hope that we could find something like this in the Americas...but I fear that colonialism ruined those chances.
Thanks for sharing!