BRONZE AGE STONE SLAB DISCOVERED IN FRANCE IS OLDEST MAP IN EUROPE, SAY ARCHAEOLOGISTS
Bronze Age stone slab discovered in France is oldest map in Europe, say archaeologists
A Bronze Age slab which was excavated in France in 1900 but forgotten for more than a century may be the oldest known map in Europe, archaeologists have said.
The intricately carved stone is thought to date from 2150-1600 BCE and uses 3D topographical carvings to map out the valley of the River Odet in western Brittany.
French and British researchers identified the slab, which had been stored in the cellar of a nearby castle, as the oldest cartographical representation of a known territory in Europe.
They said the 4,000-year-old piece, which measured 2.2m long, 1.53m wide and 16cm thick, was likely to be a symbol of the political power of a principality that existed in the early Bronze Age. Despite its age the stone showed no sign of weathering, suggesting it was buried soon after its construction.
Experts from Bournemouth University, the French National Institute for Preventive Archaeological Research, the French National Centre for Scientific Research and the University of Western Brittany examined the carved slab and found repeated circular, square and cup shapes and adjoining lines apparently depicting the river network as well as roads, settlements, fields and a burial mound.
The slab shows an area of about 21km by 30km and motifs that were interpreted as signifying a settlement, suggesting the centre of the territory lay at the confluence of three river springs – the Odet, the Isole, and the Stêr Laër.
Archaeologists leading the study, which is published in the French journal Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française, said the map was likely to have been made at a similar time to the Nebra sky disk found in Germany – the oldest known concrete depiction of the cosmos.
They said the two stone pieces highlighted the cartographic knowledge of prehistoric societies.
The so-called Saint-Bélec slab was re-used in a burial to form one of the walls of a stone cist – a small coffin-like box used to hold the bodies of the dead – towards the end of the early Bronze Age, around 1900-1640 BCE.
The slab was acquired by a private museum in 1900 before France’s Museum of National Antiquities bought it in 1924. It was stored in a chateau moat until the 1990s, and then in 2014, it was found in a cellar of the castle.
Researchers only discovered the significance of the carvings after conducting high-resolution 3D scans of the slab in 2017.
“This is probably the oldest map of a territory that has been identified,” Dr Clément Nicolas from Bournemouth University, one of the study's authors, told the BBC.
“There are several such maps carved in stone all over the world. Generally, they are just interpretations. But this is the first time a map has depicted an area on a specific scale.”
Reference: Independent: Tom Batchelor
Articles - Latest
- Earthquakes can trigger quartz into forming giant gold nuggets, study finds
- Linda Nolan, singer and television personality, dies aged 65
- Sly Stone, pioneering funk and soul musician, dies aged 82
- Dangers of an overloaded car include:
- Natural Disaster today
- Japan earthquake: Kushiro shakes for 'too long' as 6.1 mag tremor hits
- 'Cult' members jailed over coroner kidnap plot
- Flood risk threatens Swiss valley after glacier destroys village
- Thailand Grapples with Floods and Economic Shifts: Government Response, Community Resilience, and Market Predictions
- Powerful hailstorm floods buildings and streets in Gniezno
- The Significance of the 49-Day Journey After Death
- Killing prisoners for transplants: Forced organ harvesting in China
- Southern Japan hit by 6.6-magnitude quake near Nankai Trough, tsunami warnings lifted
- Peru’s coastline battered by tsunami-like waves one day after country declares environmental emergency
- California fires live updates: ‘Dangerous’ winds return as residents are warned over threat of new wildfires
- Osibisa founding member and singer Teddy Osei dead at 88
- Oliviero Toscani, photographer behind shock Benetton ads, dead at 82
- California LA Mayor Karen Bass awkwardly ignores questions from reporter about California fires
- UK set for more freezing weather as homes and businesses deal with flooding
- Jean-Marie Le Pen dead at 96: His political career through the years
- Jimmy Carter, former US president, dies aged 100
- ‘Jazz’s most significant composer’ Benny Golson dies at 95
- Billionaire founder of fashion chain Mango dies in accident
Articles - Most Read
- Main
- Contact Us
- The science behind Ouija boards
- Cosmic Consciousness - What is Cosmic Consciousness-2
- Cosmic Consciousness-Introduction
- Cosmic Consciousness - Introduction-2
- MASSIVE 6.1 MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE HITS NEW ZEALAND AS NATION STILL REELING FROM CYCLONE
- ARCHAEOLOGISTS UNRAVEL THE TRUTH OF APHRODITE, GODDESS OF LOVE, ON VALENTINE'S DAY
- Cosmic Consciousness First Words - 1V - 2
- The Human Condition-Thomas Keating
- Cosmic Consciousness First Words - V -
- Cosmic Consciousness V - 2
- Cosmic consciousness - First Words - IV
- Shakyamuni Buddha or India the 1st “Black Revolutionary Hero.”
- Cosmic Consciousness - What is Cosmic Consciousness?
- Evolution and Devolution-Chapter 2
- The Human Condition-2-Thomas Keating
- The Human Condition - Thomas keating-3
- Cosmic Consciousness-On the Plane of Self Consciousness
- Drinking From The Mountain Stream - Milarepa
- The Human Condition - 4
- Cosmic Consciousness - 3 - On the Plane of Self Consciousness
- The Human Condition - 6
- Evolution and Devolution-Chapter 1
- On the Plane of Self Consciousness - 2
- The Human Condition - 5
- Milarepa's World-2
- Milarepa's World
- Contemplation and the Divine Therapy - 2
- The Buddhist System of Liberation - 2
- On the Plane of Self Consciousness IV
- The Buddhist System of Liberation
- JERRY RAWLINGS, GHANAIAN STRONG MAN WHO CAME TO POWER IN A COUP BUT INTRODUCED DEMOCRACY – OBITUARY
- On the Plane of Self Consciousness IV - 2