Alpine Crystal Hunters

Digs & Discoveries September/October 2022

(G. Perissinotto/Archäologischer Dienst Graubünden)
SHARE:

In the winter of 2013, amateur geologist and expert crystal hunter Heinz Infanger was backcountry skiing in the mountains of central Switzerland’s canton of Uri when he came upon a rich vein of rock crystal exposed by a retreating glacier. Infanger soon discovered antler tools, wood fragments, and rock crystal artifacts, which suggested the outcropping had been visited by crystal hunters in the distant past. He reported his discovery to local heritage authorities, and a team led by archaeologist Marcel Cornelissen of the Institute of the Cultures of the Alps visited the site and conducted a thorough excavation. The team determined that hunter-gatherers living during the Alpine Mesolithic period (ca. 9000–5500 B.C.) visited the site as recently as 5900 B.C. and extracted rock crystal from the vein, after which it was covered by the advancing glacier. The closest known Mesolithic encampments are a two-day trek from the outcropping. Cornelissen and his colleagues have embarked on a broader field survey of the area, where warming conditions may have exposed more sites dating to this little-understood period. 

  • Features September/October 2022

    1,000 Fathoms Down

    In the Gulf of Mexico, archaeologists believe they have identified a nineteenth-century whaling ship crewed by a diverse group of New Englanders

    Read Article
    (Courtesy the New Bedford Whaling Museum)
  • Letter from Germany September/October 2022

    Berlin's Medieval Origins

    In the midst of modern construction, archaeologists search for evidence of the city’s earliest days

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Landesdenkmalamt Berlin/Michael Malliaris)
  • Artifacts September/October 2022

    Nordic Bronze Age Figurine

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Thomas Terberger)
  • Digs & Discoveries September/October 2022

    The Case of Tut's Missing Collar

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Marc Gabolde)