BOXFORD, ENGLAND—According to a BBC News report, a piece of wood decorated with a series of parallel incisions that was discovered in southeast England during a construction project has been radiocarbon dated to about 6,640 years ago by a team of scientists from the University of Groningen. The waterlogged piece of oak, preserved in peat some five feet below ground level near the River Lambourn, measures about three feet long, 16 inches wide, and eight inches thick. Researchers suggest the piece of decorated timber may have been part of a wooden obelisk. The timber is being conserved by researchers from Historic England. To read about evidence of a lost Mesolithic world under the North Sea, go to "Letter from Doggerland: Mapping a Vanished Landscape."
Mesolithic Carved Log Uncovered in England
News June 8, 2023
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2019
Down by the River
(Courtesy Maritime Archaeology Trust)
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2016
Mesolithic Markings
(Courtesy POSTGLACIAL project, University of York)
PA Media Pte Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2024
Seahenge Sings
Homer Sykes/Alamy Stock Photo
-
Features May/June 2023
The Man in the Middle
How an ingenious royal official transformed Persian conquerors into proper Egyptian pharaohs
(© The Trustees of the British Museum) -
Letter from the American Southeast May/June 2023
Spartans of the Lower Mississippi
Unearthing evidence of defiance and resilience in the homeland of the Chickasaw
(Kimberly Wescott and Brad Lieb, Chickasaw Native Explorers Program 2015) -
Artifacts May/June 2023
Greek Kylix Fragments
(Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford) -
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2023
The Beauty of Bugs
(Michael Terlep)