Article 4ST9S Archaeologists unearth a Bronze Age warrior’s personal toolkit

Archaeologists unearth a Bronze Age warrior’s personal toolkit

by
Kiona N. Smith
from Ars Technica - All content on (#4ST9S)
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The contents of the Bronze Age toolkit with the mud cleaned off. (credit: V. Minkus)

Three-thousand years ago, at least 140 fighters died in a battle along the banks of Germany's Tollense River. One of the fallen dropped a small kit containing tools and a handful of bronze scraps. Based on the types of artifacts archaeologists found in this kit, they've concluded that at least some of the combatants in the prehistoric battle probably came from hundreds of kilometers away in Central or even Southern Europe.

According to University of Gittingen archaeologist Tobias Uhlig and his colleagues, that suggests that large-scale battles between far-flung groups began long before people in Europe had developed a system of writing to record the history of their conflicts.

An ancient battlefield

Today, quiet pastures flanked by woods line the banks of the Tollense River in Northeastern Germany. But beneath the green grass and the placid surface of the water, the 3,000-year-old remains of fallen soldiers and their broken weapons lie scattered for at least 2.5km along the river. Most of what we know of the European Bronze Age comes from more peaceful contexts, like settlement or burial sites; the bones, weapons, and personal effects along the Tollense River are the only archaeological evidence (so far) of a battle in prehistoric Europe.

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