Detecting a 4,000-year-old golden sword in Scotland
Scientists have collected an ancient 4,000-year-old sword in the field of a football field.
According to Daily mail, a small sword was unearthed when people built a new football field in Carnoustie, Angus, Scotland.
The golden gripe sword is about 4,000 years old in Scotland.
Scientists quickly came to the site to discover and conduct research to expand excavation. Currently, people have temporarily stopped the construction of the football field.
The small sword has a golden grip, dating from the Bronze Age. Experts have brought the artifact to the laboratory to conduct further research.
This first discovery may reveal a weapons arsenal from the Bronze Age dating back thousands of years.
Archaeologist Alan Hunter Blair, head of the research team, said: "We are trying to detect more artifacts and conduct further studies in the lab. This may be a broken sword. At this point it is difficult to say exactly what it is.
This is not the first time the bronze artifact found in Carnoustie. Earlier, people found bronze women lost about 3,700 years ago. Through the evidence obtained, the scientist believed that Bronze Age residents were popular in Scotland.
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