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Archaeologists have the opportunity to discover how people in the late Bronze Age lived and what they ate by excavating a dwelling destroyed by fire 3,000 years ago in Cambridgeshire County, England. Researchers are calling the site a time capsule, as vitrified food—meaning it has become like glass—has been found in jars at the site.
Archaeologists also have found rare small pots and exotic glass beads at the site, which will be studied with a £1.1 million ($1.73 million) research project over a nine-month period. They think it was a settlement of prosperous people.
The settlement was buried in the wet fens but is being excavated using earth-moving machinery. Previously in fens (wetlands), archaeological work was done only in shallow areas or near the edges of the fens, says MustFarm.com. They call it ‘deep space archaeology’ because the remnants of the community are buried so deeply in the mire. MustFarm.com calls it one of the most important European Bronze Age sites.
www.Ancient-Origins.net – Reconstructing the story of humanity’s past