Peat bog yields up 200+ soldiers from 2000 years ago; preservation shows DNA presence

wfgodot

Former Member
Joined
Mar 4, 2009
Messages
30,166
Reaction score
723
Bones of 200 slaughtered soldiers from the time of Christ are
so well preserved in peat bog that their DNA can be studied
(Daily Mail)
Danish archaeologists have re-opened a mass grave of scores of slaughtered Iron Age warriors to find new clues about their fate and the bloody practices of Germanic tribes on the edge of the Roman Empire.

Bones of around 200 soldiers have already been found preserved in a peat bog near the village of Alken on Denmark's Jutland peninsula.
---
The soggy conditions at Alken have delayed decomposition so the remains are unusually well preserved.
---
The remains are from the beginning of the Roman Iron Age, though Roman armies never reached so far north.
---
Much more, with pictures, at link above; one photo caption misspells the name of famous find: it's Tollund Man they refer to. (Wiki link)
 
Thanks for posting this. I'll certainly stay tuned for future developments. There is a lot that can be learned from discoveries such as this.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
167
Guests online
3,222
Total visitors
3,389

Forum statistics

Threads
592,093
Messages
17,963,094
Members
228,679
Latest member
dmxclearance
Back
Top