Bog Body Discovered in Denmark

News December 15, 2022

(Lea Mohr Hansen, ROMU)
SHARE:
Denmark Bog Bones
(Lea Mohr Hansen, ROMU)

STENLØSE, DENMARK—Live Science reports that human and animal bones, as well as an unpolished flint ax head, were recovered from what was once a bog on Denmark’s island of Zealand during an investigation conducted before a construction project. The style of the ax suggests that the bones date to the early Neolithic period, more than 5,000 years ago, according to Emil Struve of the ROMU museums. “We know that traditions of human sacrifices date back that far—we have other examples of it,” he said. The human remains include leg bones, a pelvis, and part of a lower jaw with some teeth still attached. The rest of the body probably lay outside the protective layer of peat and was not preserved. Examination of the pelvis and teeth may yield information about the person’s age and sex. Struve and his colleagues plan to conduct a full excavation of the site in the spring. To read about canine remains found in a Danish bog, go to "Denmark's Bog Dogs."

  • Features November/December 2022

    Mexico's Butterfly Warriors

    The annual monarch migration may have been a sacred event for the people of Mesoamerica

    Read Article
    (+NatureStock)
  • Features November/December 2022

    Magical Mystery Door

    An investigation of an Egyptian sacred portal reveals a history of renovation and deception

    Read Article
    (© The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge)
  • Letter from Australia November/December 2022

    Murder Islands

    The doomed voyage of a seventeenth-century merchant ship ended in mutiny and mayhem

    Read Article
    (Roger Atwood)
  • Artifacts November/December 2022

    Hellenistic Inscribed Bones

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority)