A petroglyph of a boat discovered in northern Norway has been estimated to date back 10,000 to 11,000 years.
The petroglyph was discovered by retired geologist Ingvar Lindahl at Efjorden in the Nordland county, reports broadcaster NRK.
Analysis has now estimated the petroglyph, which depicts a boat, to be between 10,000 and 11,000 years old, according to the report.
“This is an extremely important development, a global sensation in fact, and will enter the history of research in a very, very big way,” archaeologist Jan Magne Gjerde of Tromsø University told NRK.
The petroglyph was dated using estimates of the height of the water level against the rock on which it is carved, Gjerde said. Water levels in the region were higher during the Stone Age than they are today.
“The boat is a little over four metres long. You can see the keel line and the railing line, and as you move forward you can see a really beautiful finish, forming the boat’s bows,” Gjerde told NRK, adding that the find was “incredibly exciting”.
The petroglyph is possibly the oldest in the world depicting a boat, the archaeologist told NRK. The Local
Actualización. Petroglifo noruego representa un barco de hace 10.000 años
Actualmente se trata de la representación de una embarcación más antigua que se conoce
Escandinavia
atesora abundantes petroglifos representando embarcaciones, pero uno de
ellos, encontrado en Efjorden, al norte de Noruega, parece ostentar el
honor de ser el más antiguo que se ha documentado hasta la fecha. Sus
investigadores lo han datado estimando las variaciones en el nivel del
agua en la zona, y piensan que tiene una antigüedad de entre 10.000 y
11.000 años. De ser así, se trataría de una de las representaciones de
un barco más antiguas que existen en el mundo...
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