The Megalithic
Portal
 - please click to visit this advertiser
 Search 
 
Latest EntriesFind a Site / MapsContributeNews and LinksForumShopAbout UsLogin / New account
Main Menu
News
Forum
Browse by Country/Type
About us/Help/FAQ
Your Own Page
Contact Editor
Top Contributors
Online Shop
Site Search
NEW: Join our Society
Tony Ainsworth Earth Energy Healer
Cheap Airline Tickets

Random Image

Featured Title:
Stone Circles CD-ROM now just £10
Stone Circles CD-ROM now just £10

The AVA Guide to Outdoor Photography £4.99
The AVA Guide to Outdoor Photography £4.99

Login
User ID

Password

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like your own Home Page, configurable settings and your contributions link to your page.

Who's Online
There are currently, 97 guests and 6 members online.

You are an Anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here

Instant Chat
Registered users can chat here, live!

Sponsored Links

More Choices


News: Uni team hails artefacts find in Croatia

Submitted by vicky on Tuesday, 13 January 2004  Page Views: 463
Recent Discoveries

External Links:
Bookmark this page on your favourite Bookmark siteAdd our RSS feed to your Feed Reader

Birmingham University researchers have helped to unearth one of the most important archaeological sites discovered in the last 50 years - in a Croatian riverbed. Swords, helmets, jewellery, and axes were discovered at the Valley of the River Cetina site, which experts say could hold the key to more than 8,000 years of Balkan history.

Project leader Dr Vincent Gaffney, director of the Institute for Archaeology and Antiquity at the university, said the finds dated from 6,000 BC [editors note - I think this should be 600BC] and included more than 90 swords, a Roman dagger and 30 Greco-Illyrian helmets.

Timbers visible through the water also provided evidence of late Neolithic or early Bronze Age settlements in the area.

Dr Gaffney said: "It is quite unique to have a virgin site with this level of preservation offering environmental, metalwork, stone and timber artefacts all on one site.

"The Cetina Valley is certainly the most remarkable site that I have, and will ever, have the privilege of being involved in - a once in a lifetime discovery for any archaeologist."

Dr Gaffney said the site was of major strategic and geographical importance.

"The gorge with its mountains provided a natural barrier, but we also know that it was a border between the Venetian and Turkish empires, and between the Roman empire and the Slavic kingdoms.

"Also, as many parts of Croatia have little water, this rich, green valley would also have been important as a major water source."

The Birmingham University team were due to return to the site in May this year to carry out further surveys.

Source: IC Birmingham 13/01/2004
Please add your thoughts on this site
 
Towers in the North: The Brochs of Scotland
Towers in the North: The Brochs of Scotland

Related Links
· More about Recent Discoveries
· News by vicky


Most read story about Recent Discoveries:
Lindow Man 'was a simple murder victim'

Print version:Printer Friendly Page

Auto-Translation (Google)
Translate from English into:

"Uni team hails artefacts find in Croatia" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
Threshold
  
Comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
Your Name: Anonymous [ New User ]

Subject:


Add your comment or contribution to this page:
Spam or offensive posts are deleted immediately, don't even bother

<Type the single letter 'why' into the box to confirm you are a human not a spam robot!

Allowed HTML: Create a link like this: <a href="http://www.megalithic.co.uk">This is a link</a>
<p> <b> <i> <a> <em> <br> <strong> <blockquote> <tt> <li> <ol> <ul> <object> <param> <embed>


IMPORTANT NOTES: Please do not use this web site if you do not agree to our Terms and Conditions of use.
If you plan to visit ancient sites in person, please make sure you follow our Charter.

RSS News Feeds: Main News Forum Latest New Images What`s This?
Articles, photographs and comments are the property of their respective posters, all the rest 1997-2003 by Andy Burnham.
You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php or ultramode.txt