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gemini.no
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An airbase designed to
accommodate Norway’s new fleet of F-35 jet fighters was once an Iron Age Viking
settlement, dating back some 1,500 years, archaeologists have discovered. The ancient village was
unearthed as experts from Norway’s NTNU University Museum in Trondheim examined
the strategic site on Orland peninsula. Norwegian law requires a preliminary
archaeological study of any site before construction works begin.
RT report continues:
“It
was a sheltered area along the Norwegian coastal route from southern Norway to
the northern coasts. And it was at the mouth of Trondheim Fjord, which was a
vital link to Sweden and the inner regions of mid-Norway,” Ingrid Ystgaard,
project manager at the Department of Archaeology and Coastal History at the
NTNU University Museum, told Gemini.no, which breaks science news from the
NTNU.
Because
of its strategic location, Orland has long had a reputation as a potential
treasure trove of discoveries. Archaeologists just couldn't wait for an
opportunity to check it out. When Oslo said it planned to purchase fifty-two
new F-35 fighter jets, which need new accommodation facilities at Orland,
archaeologists greeted it as good news.
A
delicate blue glass bead that's at least 1500 years old was among the finds
archaeologists have made at the Orland Main Air Station dig. © NTNU University
Museum
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Carefully
removing the soil, centimeter-by-centimeter, while surveying a huge area of
about 91,000 square meters (roughly the size of two shopping malls), the
researchers unearthed post holes for three large "longhouses"
arranged in a U-shape, where Vikings may have gathered. One of the longhouses
contained several fire pits, at least one of which was clearly used for
cooking, according to the researchers. Other fire pits may have provided light
for handwork, or for heating the longhouse.
Archaeologists
expect there are graves too, and a harbor with boat houses somewhere around.
“There
was a lot of activity here,” Ystgaard said of the site.
Where
there's activity, there are garbage dumps (called 'middens' in the trade.)
It
takes some really tough trash to survive 1500 years, archaeologists say.
Mostly, what they found were beads, glass and metal objects, and ceramics.
“Most
of the time we don’t even find middens at all on sites that are older than the
mediaeval period,” Ystgaard said.
The
middens have already proved to be full of pleasant surprises. One was a
delicate blue glass bead and several amber beads, suggesting the Vikings loved
their bling too. Another was the remains of a green drinking glass that was characteristic
of imports from the Rhine Valley in Germany, according to archaeologists. It's
also a testament to how well off the former residents of the area were,
Ystgaard noted. “It says something that people had enough wealth to trade for
glass.”
“We’re
really able to put things in context because the area is so big,” Ystgaard
said. The archaeologists will be working on the site through the end of the
2016 field season.
The team also found a
quantity of old animal and fish bones – mainly because the soil in the area is
made from ground-up seashells, which isn’t very acidic, they said. Normally,
soil in Norway tends to be more acidic, and eats away at bones, researchers
explained. The archaeologists also found fish remains, from both salmon and
cod, and bones from seabirds.
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