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Construction Workers Dug Up a Sewer Line—and Found 3,800-Year-Old Tools

Construction Workers Dug Up a Sewer Line—and Found 3,800-Year-Old Tools

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Here's what you'll learn when you read this story:
A construction project to upgrade a sewer conveyance system in Canada led to the discovery of an archaeological site containing ancient wooden tools.
Archaeologists uncovered 3,800-year-old wooden wedges that were likely used to help split logs into planks.
The team also discovered cordage made of plant and wood fibers that could have served a multitude of everyday purposes.
Crews working to upgrade a sewer conveyance system on Vancouver Island in Canada unearthed a rare archaeological 'wet site' featuring 3,800-year-old wooden tools and cordage.
Located on K'ómoks First Nation territory, the find includes wooden wedges likely used to split logs into planks—a common tool in home construction, according to a K'ómoks statement. 'Traditionally, wedges were made from fine-grained woods like yew, spruce, maple, and crabapple, and they were often scorched to increase their hardness,' the statement read. 'The wedge would include a cordage collar or 'grommet,' which helped to prevent the edge of the wood from fraying when hammered.'
The team also located the traditional cordage rope—typically made from plant and wood fibers—that could have been a commonly used tool in everyday life tasks ranging from making clothes or baskets to hunting, fishing, harvesting, or fishing.
The wedges look similar to railroad spikes, and can easily fit in a hand. Cordage was still wrapped and tied on the end, likely to provide cushioning when the wedges were hammered.
Crews worked with the Royal BC Museum to aid in the wet site's conservation, and teams hope to explore both the tools and cordage further to uncover which plant species and manufacturing techniques were used in their creation. Gaining more information about the materials could lead to a better understanding of the purpose of the tools.
A wet site is a waterlogged archaeological location. That may at first feel like a negative quality, but water is known to help preserve organic matter—particularly vegetation and wood. These unique preservation characteristics can lead to rich archaeological finds.
'Organic materials like wood plant fibers, basketry, fishing nets, and leather typically only survive in waterlogged archaeological sites, where a lack of oxygen means that microbes and bacteria can't break them down,' said the K'ómoks First Nation. 'In most archaeological sites, archaeologists find tools and other cultural materials made of more hardy materials like stone, antler, shell, and animal bones. However, in wet sites, they can find tangible and remarkably preserved organic materials as well.'
As work on the sewer conveyance project—which was meant to protect the shorelines and waters throughout the Comox Valley—has continued, project officials have worked with the K'ómoks First Nation to document and recover archaeological materials impacted by the project, which runs through many of the Nation's ancestral settlements and villages. 'These new findings,' the Nation wrote, 'underscores the importance of archaeological analysis in construction projects. Without archaeological monitoring, excavation, and analysis, these fragile materials that teach us about deep-time history can be destroyed, and information can be permanently erased.'
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Archaeologists Were Exploring a Cave—and Found 100 Prehistoric Structures
Archaeologists Were Exploring a Cave—and Found 100 Prehistoric Structures

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Archaeologists Were Exploring a Cave—and Found 100 Prehistoric Structures

Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: The discovery of more than 100 prehistoric structures in the Cova Dones cave in Spain makes it one of the most significant prehistoric underground sites in the world. Archaeologists found stalagmites intentionally reassembled within the caves, dating them to prehistoric times. Questions remain about the purpose of the underground structures in a cave already known for a wealth of finds. Prehistoric humans intentionally modified stalagmites in the Cova Dones cave in Spain, forming over 100 structures—known as speleofacts—as a result. The recent archaeological find becomes one of the most significant prehistoric underground discoveries in the world, according to the team behind the discovery. 'This finding shows the adaptation of the environment by the prehistoric communities and places the site as the second most important in the world in this category, only behind the French cave of Saint-Marcel,' the discovery team from the universities of Alicante and Zaragoza wrote in a translated statement. Located in Millares, Cova Dones may have just jumped to the forefront of prehistoric underground discussions, but answers may be hard to come by. The archaeological team identified more than 100 speleofacts coming from the fracture, displacement, or regrouping of stalagmites to form structures. Experts believe this is 'convincing evidence of the planned occupation of the underground environment by prehistoric societies.' Still, some of the patterning of the recreated forms leaves questions as to their purpose, whether ritual or instead related to site planning by forming boundaries. The team was able to start dating the speleofacts thanks to calcium regrowth on the fractures, allowing them to 'attribute, at least partially, these interventions to prehistoric periods.' The researchers plan to continue to study the speleofacts to better date the timing of the underground work and 'accurately determine the scope and chronology of these structures.' This isn't the first time the prehistoric nature of Cova Dones has surfaced. In 2023, Antiquity published a study classifying the cave as home to the largest set of Paleolithic rock art on the eastern Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula, with more than 100 paintings and engravings dated around 24,000 years old. The paintings included at least 19 animal representation in three different zones in the cave, some roughly 1,300 feet from the entrance. The study noted that all the zones were easily accessible without any climbing required. Key animals shown in the graphics included horses, deer, aurochs, and a stag. The researchers were able to date the cave art because of an overlap with cave bear claw marks and the artwork. Cave bears went extinct roughly 24,000 years ago. Shortly after the rock art finding, the existence of a 1,900-year-old Roman sanctuary was revealed in a room roughly 650 feet from the entrance of the cave, with a set of inscriptions and a coin of Emperor Claudius. The 2023 study noted that much of the cave system was yet unexplored by modern archaeologists, opening the possibility for additional finds. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

Evidence is building that people were in the Americas 23,000 years ago
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Evidence is building that people were in the Americas 23,000 years ago

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Major Investment to Transform Mental Health Research
Major Investment to Transform Mental Health Research

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Major Investment to Transform Mental Health Research

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