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Related: About this forumNorwegian Archaeologists Are Salvaging Priceless Artifacts From Melting Glaciers--Before It's Too Lat
Norwegian Archaeologists Are Salvaging Priceless Artifacts From Melting GlaciersBefore Its Too Late
The team has uncovered thousands of objects in the Innlandet region, including a 3,000-year-old arrow.
Richard Whiddington, October 15, 2023
The arrow found by Glacier Archaeology Program. Image: Espen Finstad/secretsoftheice.com.
There is surely little upside to the environmental changes posed by global warming, but nevertheless, a group of Norwegian archaeologists is seizing the opportunities presented by the countrys rapidly melting glaciers.
That group is Glacier Archaeology Programsnappy internet alias: Secrets of the Iceand since receiving permanent government funding in 2011 it has been responsible for 90 percent of Norways glacial finds.
Granted, the groups success is partly tied to the topography of Innlandet. The county boasts many of Norways highest peaks, and the team has pursued salvaging artefacts from remote locations in a comprehensive and systematic manner. To date, it has made 4,000 finds across 66 sites.
The most recent discovery was a wooden arrow with a quartzite tip and intact feathers. The Jotunheimen mountain ice had preserved the arrow so well it appeared new. In fact, it is an estimated 3,000 years old, with archaeologists confident it belonged to a reindeer hunter in the late Stone Age or early Bronze age. It was one of roughly 250 objects found this season.
More:
https://news.artnet.com/art-world/norway-ice-archeology-2369685
eppur_se_muova
(37,366 posts)A researcher into the history of the Rocky Mountain locust was able to find insect remains in the melting snowpack from decades ago, but they were rapidly being washed away as the snow melted. This was a couple of decades back already.
KS Toronado
(19,558 posts)but they could retrieve their arrow easily.