logo
#

Latest news with #DanielNösler

Archaeologists Find Well-Preserved Bronze Age Daggers
Archaeologists Find Well-Preserved Bronze Age Daggers

Yahoo

time06-04-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Archaeologists Find Well-Preserved Bronze Age Daggers

Archaeologists excavating a field in the municipality of Kutenholz in the Stade District, in Lower Saxony, Germany, have discovered two well-preserved Bronze Age daggers which are believed to date back 3,000 years. The discovery shed light upon the rituals and belief systems of ancient European site was first encountered by a metal detectorist in 2017. In 2023, after assessing the contents buried below the soil, targeted excavations began in four designated zones of a cornfield. 'With geomagnetic prospection, archaeological structures in the ground can be made visible even without excavation," archaeologist Daniel Nösler explained in a statement released by Stade district officials (via Ancient Origins). Shortly after the excavation began, archaeologists diverted the two daggers buried under about 11 inches of soil. Both were remarkably well-preserved, with the blades in pristine, unbent condition. 'One of the blades was stuck vertically in the ground, another was also lying almost vertically in the sand, possibly hit by a plow," Nösler said. "It is a stroke of luck that the daggers were not destroyed at such a shallow depth in the area, which has been cultivated with agricultural equipment for years.'The daggers were crafted with a copper-tin alloy which dates back to around 1500 B.C. Though the wooden handles have long since degraded and disappeared, scientists were able to determine from the shape of the blade that the knives were used for ceremonial and burial purposes rather than in active combat. "The daggers likely had ritual significance with a religious or ideological background," said Tobias Mörtz, an expert in Bronze Age weapons deposits. Both daggers are currently at the University of Hamburg, where they are undergoing analysis and restoration. Researchers are hopeful that the daggers will provide further information about previously unknown Bronze Age cultural practices from this region.

A Metal Detectorist Discovered 3,000-Year-Old Bronze Daggers With A Mysterious Purpose
A Metal Detectorist Discovered 3,000-Year-Old Bronze Daggers With A Mysterious Purpose

Yahoo

time31-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

A Metal Detectorist Discovered 3,000-Year-Old Bronze Daggers With A Mysterious Purpose

A metal detectorist recently discovered not one, but two bronze and wood daggers that experts dated to over 3,000 years ago. Only the bronze portions of the instruments survived for so long buried in a German field. Scholars believe the daggers weren't used as weapons, but rather were ritual offerings. Two bronze-bladed daggers over 3,000 years old were recently found buried—but, curiously, standing upright—in a field in northern Germany. As it turns out, that positioning would tell experts plenty about these blades, which very well may have never seen battle. Initially, a metal detectorist discovered fragments of metal blades when searching a field near Kutenholz in the German district of Stade in 2017. But it wasn't until 2024 that archaeologists took a closer look at the area, which led to the discovery of Bronze Age weapons: two daggers made of—you guessed it—bronze (which is a mix of copper and tin). 'One of the blades was stuck vertically in the ground, the other was also almost vertically in the sand, possibly hit by a plow,' Daniel Nösler, and archaeologist from the Stade District, said in a translated statement. To find the blades, a team from the University of Hamburg searched the area with geomagnetic devices and then probed the soil with a shovel in four areas of a harvested cornfield until they found the daggers burried just over a foot deep in the soil. The team said it was pure coincidence that the blades were never destroyed by the heavy agricultural equipment that routinely plowed the area. Closer examination of the two daggers by university experts showed that the handles were likely made of wood, though they were (unsurprisingly) not preserved over the last three millennia. The bronze used to craft the blades comes from roughly 1500 B.C., and was most likely sourced from somewhere in Eastern-Central Europe. The experts studying the daggers believe the entire blade was about the length of a person's forearm. Tobias Mörtz, archaeologist at the University of Hamburg, said in a statement that the daggers were likely more ceremonial and cultural than aggressive weaponry. Due to both the orientation of the blades—buried vertically in the soil at the highest elevation in Kutenholz, which is about 92 feet high—and to the archaeologists finding no traces of burials in the area, they concluded that the daggers not used as funerary goods or as weapons. Instead, the scholars believe the daggers were intentionally set in their places as a sort of offering. The offering's intent is unknown, but those involved in the discovery are surely happy to find it nonetheless, over 3,000 years later. 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?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store