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View Full Version : German authorities let 7,000-year-old boats rot



BAJR Host
17th March 2009, 09:24 PM
You can hear this in the new podcast in a couple of days

A pair ofprehistoric boats, thought to be the oldest in Europe, have been allowed to rot in a partially collapsed shed while the northern German regional archaeology authorities stood by broke and helpless.

The two 7,000-year-old wooden boats and a third one thought to be around 6,000 years old, were hailed as a sensation when they were found during construction work on the Baltic coast near Stralsund seven years ago. But now they are effectively ruined, after a lack of funds resulted in them being stored inappropriately.
"It is a loss for Germany if not for the whole world," said Andreas Grueger, director of the Stralsund historical museum.
The boats had been entrusted to the Authorities for Culture and Preservation of Ancient Monuments in Schwerin for restoration and conservation. But Michael Bednorz, head of the State Office admitted that financial difficulties meant that they were kept in a shed instead of an appropriate space. The log boats are only an example for our problems he said.
Although much damage was inflicted during the first two years of storage, they were then further damaged when the shed they were stored in partially collapsed in 2004. Yet still they were not moved to safety.
The state office's storage facilities have less than a good reputation - mice have chewed up ancient documents in the main archive, while a water leakage destroyed precious artefacts in another depot. The remains of the boats have now been sent to the University of Applied Sciences in Berlin where students are planning to investigate the extent of the damage and draw up a plan to save at least fragments.


“When a sinister person means to be your enemy, they always start by trying to become your friend.”
William Blake

Dirty Dave Lincoln
17th March 2009, 11:38 PM
Although the loss of these boats is to be deplored, there is one ray of hope from the story. With the right conditions, we know that boats of such an antiquity CAN survive.
So who knows what else is waiting to be discovered?

BAJR Host
18th March 2009, 08:00 AM
then left in a shed :face-huh: :face-approve:

“When a sinister person means to be your enemy, they always start by trying to become your friend.”
William Blake

kevin wooldridge
18th March 2009, 10:21 AM
I agree with DD regarding the 'ray of hope', but does anyone know what the current long term prognosis for timber conservation is?

I ask because I seem to remember reading a few years back that even ships which had had a lot of money spent on conservation (such as the Vasa in Stockholm and the Mary Rose in Pompey) will eventually degrade.



With peace and consolation hath dismist, And calm of mind all passion spent...

Plautus
19th March 2009, 12:47 AM
Couldn't they have just sunk them in the river again? I know it sounds kind of stupid, but river mud is a excellent preserver of wood, and it would have least have been better than a shed until they could find something more suitable.