Ancient fingerprint discovered on 2,400-year-old Danish war boat

Researchers have uncovered a partial human fingerprint preserved in the caulking of the Hjortspring boat, Scandinavia's oldest plank vessel, suggesting its origins along the Baltic Sea coast. The 2,400-year-old boat, used in an Iron Age raid on Denmark's Als island, was analyzed using modern scientific methods. This finding provides new clues to a century-old mystery about the vessel's builders.

The Hjortspring boat, excavated from a bog on the Danish island of Als in the early 1920s, has long intrigued historians. Believed to have been used by a group of Iron Age warriors in an attack on the island around 2,000 years ago, the vessel was sunk by local defenders as a victory offering. Weapons found with the boat were common across Northern Europe, offering little insight into the invaders' origins.

A recent study, published in PLOS One by Mikael Fauvelle of Lund University and colleagues, examined unstudied materials from the site, including cordage and waterproofing caulk. Radiocarbon dating placed the boat's construction between 381 and 161 BCE, confirming its pre-Roman Iron Age origins. Chemical analysis via gas chromatography-mass spectrometry revealed the caulk consisted of animal fat mixed with pine pitch.

Pine forests were scarce in Denmark and northern Germany during the first millennium BCE, leading researchers to propose the materials sourced from regions east along the Baltic Sea coast. This implies the boat and its crew undertook a deliberate sea crossing for the raid on Als.

Most notably, the team identified a partial fingerprint in the caulk, likely left during a repair. As the authors stated, this mark offers "a direct link to the seafarers of the ancient vessel." They added, "Finding a fingerprint on the tar fragments from the boat was a big surprise for us. Fingerprints like this one are extremely unusual for this time period."

The analysis resolves challenges from the boat's early excavation, when conservation chemicals rendered much material undateable. By locating original, untreated cordage in archives, the researchers obtained reliable dates. The study was funded by the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation and Riksbankens Jubileumsfond, with no influence on the research process.

Verwandte Artikel

Swedish Coast Guard and police boarding the sanctioned tanker Sea Owl 1 off Trelleborg, Sweden.
Bild generiert von KI

Schwedische Küstenwache entert Tanker vor Trelleborg

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI

Die Schwedische Küstenwache hat gemeinsam mit der Polizei den Tanker Sea Owl 1 vor Trelleborg geentert, der verdächtigt wird, unter falscher Flagge zu fahren und auf der EU-Sanktionsliste zu stehen. Das Schiff ist auf dem Weg in einen russischen Hafen, und eine Voruntersuchung zu Verstößen gegen das Seegesetz wurde eingeleitet. Dies ist die zweite solche Operation innerhalb einer Woche.

Archaeologists continue to uncover evidence of early human technologies and artistic expressions, but determining their precise timelines remains difficult due to preservation issues and dating limitations. Recent finds, such as 430,000-year-old wooden tools in Greece and a 67,800-year-old hand stencil in Indonesia, push back known dates, yet experts caution against overinterpreting single discoveries. Columnist Michael Marshall examines how these artifacts shape our understanding of human evolution.

Von KI berichtet

Researchers at Uppsala University have used ancient DNA to reveal that Stone Age burials in Sweden involved extended family members beyond immediate relatives. Analysis of shared graves at the Ajvide site on Gotland shows second- and third-degree kin were often buried together, suggesting strong community ties. The findings challenge assumptions about simple family structures in hunter-gatherer societies 5,500 years ago.

A study of ancient DNA from graves in Bulgaria shows that the Goths were a multi-ethnic group with ancestries from Scandinavia, Turkey, North Africa and beyond. This finding challenges the traditional view of Goths as primarily Scandinavian migrants moving south. The research sequenced genomes from 38 individuals at two sites dating to the 4th century AD.

Von KI berichtet

Researchers have identified chemical traces of plant-based poison on Stone Age arrowheads from South Africa, dating back 60,000 years. This marks the oldest direct evidence of humans using arrow poison for hunting. The findings highlight early mastery of natural toxins from the gifbol plant.

Researchers from Curtin University have provided strong evidence that ancient humans, rather than glaciers, transported the bluestones to Stonehenge. By analyzing river sediments near the site, they found no glacial signatures, supporting the idea of deliberate human effort. The findings challenge a long-standing debate in archaeology.

Von KI berichtet

Ein schwedischer Seemannspriester hat zehn gestrandeten russischen Matrosen auf dem vor Trelleborg festgesetzten Schiff Caffa Lebensmittel geliefert. Das Schiff, das der russischen Schattenflotte zugerechnet wird, wurde vor einer Woche von Küstenwache und Polizei bestiegen, der Kapitän wurde verhaftet. Die Besatzung hatte nicht genügend Proviant, die Hilfe erfolgte mit Unterstützung der Behörden.

 

 

 

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen