Nálezy nejenom s detektorem ve Velké Británii a Irsku

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N8lezy detektory a archeologické výzkumy ve Velké Británii a Irsku
16 Apr 2016 Viking coins in Northern Ireland 16. 4. 2016

16 Apr 2016 Viking coins in Northern Ireland

Viky
5514 0
The two rare Viking coins were discovered with a metal detector by Brian Morton, then a forty-three-year-old full-time carer. Experts say the coins are linked to a Viking raid on a nearby monastery. They are the first coins of their kind found in Northern Ireland.
The mystery of the Iron Age frog mass grave

The mystery of the Iron Age frog mass grave

GM4PRO
10238 3
More than 8,000 frog skeletal remains have been discovered by archaeologists near Cambridge in the United Kingdom, lying in a 14-metre-long trench near a roundhouse in an Iron Age settlement. Frog bones are occasionally discovered individually at archaeological sites, but a mass frog "burial" is unprecedented.
7.4.1945 Coggalbeg's treasure

7.4.1945 Coggalbeg's treasure

Viky
2718 3
A beautiful gold jewel and two gold wheels were discovered in 1945 by an Irish farmer in a bog. The treasure remained hidden until 2009, when the treasure vault was robbed by thieves. Fortunately, the precious artifacts were recovered.
Detectorist finds world's unique, 2,000-year-old Roman brooch in the shape of a horse

Detectorist finds world's unique, 2,000-year-old Roman brooch in the shape of a horse

GM4PRO
10587 12
The so-called Leasingham horse-shaped copper alloy brooch is quite unique in the archaeological record. It was discovered with his metal detector by Mr Jason Price in a field near Leasingham in the summer of 2019. There is no other of its kind. Although it has not been declared a treasure, it has now been acquired for the collection of Lincoln Museum.
Individual finds of Iron Age coins were declared treasure after 27 years

Individual finds of Iron Age coins were declared treasure after 27 years

GM4PRO
23085 0
The 2,000-year-old coins were gradually found by a single detectorist between 1993 and 1995 in the Dursley area of Gloucestershire. Experts have dated them to between 50 BC and AD 10. They are associated with a tribe known as the Dobunni, the coroner, who has now declared the coins treasure, said in a report.
Stolen valuable Darwin notebooks were anonymously returned in a pink gift bag

Stolen valuable Darwin notebooks were anonymously returned in a pink gift bag

GM4PRO
8146 3
A pink gift bag was recently found on the floor of a public area of Cambridge University Library. Inside was a custom-made archive box containing 2 notebooks protected by food-grade foil. It was soon discovered that these were Charles Darwin's notebooks stolen over 20 years ago. Inside was a printed message: Happy Easter.

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