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[QUOTE]Originally posted by DD'eDeN: [QB] Sweden 8ka Coastal lagoon - red deer hunters, fish trappers Note: India fish trap: "kudu", similar pron. to African kudu antelope and Tibetan khudru coracle of wicker & buttered yak hide) Underwater Stone Age settlement mapped out 14.11.16 6 years ago, divers discovered the oldest known stationary fish traps in N-Europe, off the coast of S-Sweden. Since then, researchers at Lund University in Sweden have uncovered an exceptionally well-preserved Stone Age site. The location was a lagoon environment, where Mesolithic humans lived during parts of the year. https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-79sym3Ha51o/WCxfK-7XRAI/AAAAAAABzps/N5HU4YQjCpQE4Bpuy9giaz2IJJcu8qLtQCLcB/s640/underwater_stone_age-1a.jpg A submerged Mesolithic lagoonal landscape in the Baltic Sea, south-eastern Sweden Early Holocene environmental reconstruction and shore-level displacement based on a multiproxy approach Anton Hansson cs 2016 Quat.Internatl. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2016.07.059> Several unprecedented archaeological findings made in the study area are presented & discussed, including stationary fishing constructions, dated to c 9.1 8.4 ka. These constructions (the oldest known in N-Europe) indicate extensive riverine & lagoonal fishing, previously not recorded during the Mesolithic in Sweden. Bones & antlers of red deer with slaughter marks & a unique pick axe made of elk antler provide evidence of human exploitation of terrestrial resources. The Haväng site shows the strong potential of submerged landscapes as palaeo-ecological source materials, and demonstrates the importance of resources at coastal settings near river-mouths for Mesolithic communities. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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