An 8-year-old girl finds a Stone Age dagger in her school

An 8-year-old girl finds a Stone Age dagger in her school


8-year-old Norwegian girl Elise found Stone Age flint dagger while playing in schoolyard – other items not found on site

A Norwegian girl has made an unusual archaeological discovery while playing outside her school in Norway. She found a stone age flint dagger, produced 3,700 years ago by men prehistoric Of the region. Identified only as Elise, the 8-year-old said she bent down to pick grass when she suddenly found the grey-brown stone object.



The school is located in Vestland county in the south of the Scandinavian country and housed the thousand-year-old artifact in a rocky region. Professor Karen Drange has identified the ancient nature of the flint, which Elise brought it to. The teacher contacted the city council, which hired archaeologists to examine the object.




The flint dagger, which is 12 cm long, probably came from Denmark, as the material does not occur naturally in Norway (Image: Vestland County Municipality)

mysterious origin

in possession of dagger measuring 12 centimeters long, archaeologist Louise Bjerre Petersen, from the municipal county of Vestland, says the find is rare. Flint, a hardened sedimentary stone, does not occur naturally in Norway, indicating that the material probably came from Denmark, crossing the North Sea to reach the country.

This type of object is common in sacrificial contexts, ie archaeological discoveries involving ritual animal sacrifices. The University Museum of Bergen, Norway’s second-largest city, joined Vestland’s team to investigate the school’s grounds, but no other Stone Age evidence was found at the site.

Analyzing the style of the dagger, it most likely dates back to the Polished Stone Age, or Neolithic, when humans prehistoric they were already able to shape stone tools and began to domesticate animals and plants, make ceramics and handicrafts and establish the first permanent settlements.



In the Neolithic Age, humans began shaping stones to produce tools, like the ones pictured (Image: Zde/CC-BY-4.0)

In Norway, the Stone Age ranges from 10,000 BC to 1,800 BC, with hunter-gatherers becoming settled to allow agriculture around 2,400 BC information about the age of the artifact and the context in which it was produced.

Source: westland county, talk about Norway

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