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A fascinating find deep in the Baltic Sea is stirring up fresh questions about Europe’s prehistoric past. Researchers have uncovered a 3,000-foot-long stone wall—now called the Blinkerwall ...
Stone Age Wall Discovered Beneath the Baltic Sea Helped Early Hunters Trap Reindeer Made up of some 1,600 stones, the submerged “Blinkerwall” might be Europe’s oldest known megastructure ...
Archaeology & History A Stone Wall Submerged in the Baltic Sea Could Be Europe’s Oldest Megastructure The "Blinkerwall" in the Bay of Mecklenburg is said to be over 10,000 years old.
A research vessel in the Baltic Sea discovered a half-mile-long stone wall underwater dating to over 10,000 years ago. Experts believe that the wall was used by Stone Age hunters to corral reindeer.
Divers have helped to reveal the remnants of a kilometre-long wall that are submerged in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Rerik, Germany. The rocks date back to the Stone Age 1. Jacob Geersen at ...
The more than half mile long wall, called the Blinkerwall, was likely used by Stone Age hunter-gatherers to herd reindeer toward a shooting blind.
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A 3,000-Foot-Long Stone Wall Found Beneath the Baltic Sea - MSNArchaeologists have uncovered a breathtaking underwater marvel-a 3,000-foot-long stone wall lying hidden beneath the Baltic Sea. This ancient structure, named the Blinkerwall, could dramatically ...
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