Viking Burial Mound Yields Bodies
Intriguing. Brings to mind my fascination with the “Iceman,” see: “20070606 Scientists say 'Iceman' died from arrow.”
Associated Press: Sept. 11, 2007 — Archaeologists opened a Viking burial mound on Monday, seeking to learn more about two women — possibly a queen and a princess — laid to rest there 1,173 years ago.
In 1904, the mound in southeastern
The 65-foot vessel was buried in 834 in the enormous mound as the grave ship for a rich and powerful Viking woman, according to the museum.
The remains of the two women, one believed to have been in her 60s and the other in her 30s, were first exhumed during the ship excavation. They were reburied in the mound in 1948 — in a modern aluminum casket placed inside a five-ton stone sarcophagus — in hopes that future scientific methods might reveal their secrets.
When experts opened the sarcophagus Monday...
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Read the entire article here: Viking Burial Mound Yields Bodies
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