Fieldwork can be uncomfortable for long-legged humans, but burrowing animals are built for digging. Furry creatures have provided invaluable assists at two different European sites. In northern Germany, a badger discovered nine remarkable 900-year-old burials, including that of a richly outfitted warrior. “There was no knowledge of these graves and no reason to investigate without the badger’s assistance,” says archaeologist Felix Biermann, who continues to dig the site. In Cumbria, England, burrowing moles have pushed up ancient objects at second-century Whitley Castle, uncovering invaluable evidence of Roman life at the fort. There have only been two previous digs, and Whitley Castle is now a protected site that human archaeologists can never explore. And not to be outdone by their terrestrial counterparts, specially trained mine-hunting dolphins discovered a nineteenth-century Howell torpedo off the coast of San Diego. Only 50 Howells were made, and only two had previously been found.
Critter Diggers
Top 10 Discoveries of 2013 January/February 2014
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2023
An Undersea Battlefield
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2024
Seahenge Sings
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2024
Location is Everything
-
Features January/February 2014
Stone Towns of the Swahili Coast
Along 2,000 miles of the East African coast, the sophisticated trading centers of the medieval Swahili reveal their origins and influences
(Samir S. Patel) -
Letter from England January/February 2014
The Scientist's Garden
Excavations in an English garden reveal the evolution of the nation's culture across thousands of years
(Adam Stanford, Aerial-Cam) -
Artifacts January/February 2014
Limestone Eagle
(Matthew Helmer) -
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2014
French Revolution Forgeries?
(Courtesy Davide Pettener/Paolo Garagnani)