Archaeologists in northern Sweden have located the remains of a farm from the Bronze Age, a find which challenges the established history of the area around Umeå and the province of Norrland.
"It is completely unique," Jan Heinerud at Västerbotten's Museum in Umeå
told The Local on Friday. "We have never previously found a long house
like this so far north."
The farm was discovered in the area between Backen and Klabböle in an
area known as Klockaråkern and it is thought that the farm was in use
for almost 600 years from around 1100 BC.
Heinerud said that the museum's experts have been unable to establish
exactly who would have lived at the location, but that they have a
number of theories.
"There were hunters and fishermen in the area at that time. My
colleagues and I at the museum think that they may have come up from the
south," he told The Local.
Heinerud explained that the find changes the history of the region
around Norrland's main city of Umeå and raises further interesting
questions over how the area was used between 500 BC and 500 AD, of which
little is known.
"With more research perhaps we can fill in this gap and the picture may change," he said.
The farm is thought to have contained a main residence in the form of a
long house in which the farmer would have lived together with the
animals, as as well a series of other smaller buildings.
The team from the Västerbotten Museum is digging at four locations, two
on either side of the river, and will do so at least until the first
snow arrives. thelocal.se/
viernes, 4 de octubre de 2013
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