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Railroad construction through a farm on the Danish island of Falster has revealed a 5,000-year-old Neolithic site hiding an advanced technology—a stone paved root cellar.
The site, known as Nygårdsvej 3, is located near the Danish village of Eskilstrup on the island of Falster. It was discovered during the extension and electrification of a railway line that ...
Archaeologists have found a stone-paved cellar at a 5,000-year-old Stone Age site in Denmark, a discovery that points to a distinct leap in construction technology in ancient Scandinavia.
RngSde Promotions returned to Nykobing Falster for a show billed as "The Return" with local hero, heavyweight Kem Ljungquist (18-0) ... Ljungquist Drops And Stops Tamim In Denmark.
Archaeological excavations conducted in Falster, Denmark, have uncovered a unique underground structure. A stone-paved cellar, 5000 years old, which is a remnant of the sophisticated techniques of ...
A team of archaeologists led by Marie Brinch from the Lolland-Falster Museum has unearthed the remains of what appears to be a stone-paved cellar, meticulously constructed around 5000 years ago on the ...
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