|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Megalithic passage grave built by the funnel beakers. There remained a chamber of 9.3 x 2.1 m in size, where all carrier stones still are present. Of the capstones, two remain collapsed, and a fragment of a third one was found. Originally, this grave was covered with a burial mound, of which the current location upon a sand mound of 3 m hight testifies. A typical architecture of prehistoric graves are the Emsländer Kammer. They are passage-graves measuring more than 20m length and 2m width and 1m hight inside. Most are oriented from east to west and have an entrance in the middle of the southern side. They originally were buried within long, oval earth mounds, that were bordered with small erratic blocks. Sometimes there are dual or triple passage chambers. Those graves were built by the first farmers and ranchers of Europe. It were people of the Trichterbecherkultur between 3400 and 2800 B.C. Those places were used for many generations. The skeletons are decayed, as the soil does not contain much lime.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
all photos © klaus rädecke, 1996-2020 & johanna haas 2010-2012 Impressum |