Remains of Iron Age Horse Recovered From Glacier

News September 17, 2013

(Oppland County Council)
SHARE:
Norwegian Ice Horse
(Oppland County Council)

OPPLAND, NORWAY—Melting glacier ice in Norway’s high mountains has revealed the remains of a horse dating to the Iron Age. “It shows that they were using horses for transport in the high alpine zone, in areas where we were quite surprised to find them” said Lars Pilø, head of snow archaeology at Oppland Council. He thinks the horse may have been used by hunters to carry reindeer carcasses off the mountains. “When it gets hot in the summer, the reindeer will get pestered by horseflies, and when they get horseflies they move up to the ice, which made the ice excellent hunting grounds,” he added. Archaeologists have also found horse shoes and manure in the ice.

  • Features July/August 2013

    The First Vikings

    Two remarkable ships may show that the Viking storm was brewing long before their assault on England and the continent

    Read Article
    Courtesy Liina Maldre, University of Tallinn
  • Features July/August 2013

    Miniature Pyramids of Sudan

    Archaeologists excavating on the banks of the Nile have uncovered a necropolis where hundreds of small pyramids once stood

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Vincent Francigny/SEDAU)
  • Letter from China July/August 2013

    Tomb Raider Chronicles

    Looting reaches across the centuries—and modern China’s economic strata

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Lauren Hilgers, Photo: Anonymous)
  • Artifacts July/August 2013

    Ancient Egyptian Sundial

    A 13th-century limestone sundial is one of the earliest timekeeping devices discovered in Egypt

    Read Article
    (© The Trustees of the British Museum/Art Resource, NY)