
Pendant made from a bear tooth. Lattringen, Switzerland. On display in Ashmolean museum, Oxford
Pendant made from a bear tooth. Lattringen, Switzerland. On display in Ashmolean museum, Oxford
Axe head. Polished stone axe still set in an antler socket. The socket would have slotted into an axe handle. Lattringen, Switzerland. On display in Ashmolean museum, Oxford
Hand tools. Small stone tools with surviving antler handles: Chisel and scraper from Luscherz, Switzerland; chisel from Lattringen, Switzerland. On display in Ashmolean museum, Oxford
Model of a late Neolithic alpine lakeside village, based on archaeological evidence from a waterlogged settlement on the shores of Lake Constance dating to about 3200 BC.
Model of a late Neolithic alpine lakeside village, based on archaeological evidence from a waterlogged settlement on the shores of Lake Constance dating to about 3200 BC.
Model of a late Neolithic alpine lakeside village, based on archaeological evidence from a waterlogged settlement on the shores of Lake Constance dating to about 3200 BC.
Model of a late Neolithic alpine lakeside village, based on archaeological evidence from a waterlogged settlement on the shores of Lake Constance dating to about 3200 BC.
From the New Yorker:
newyorker.com/tech/elements/an-ancient-lunchbox-emerges-from-the-ice
Unusual Places in Switerland
STEINKREIS.CH is a Swiss web site dedicated to unlocking the mysteries of ancient Switzerland. “Our selected books will provide numerous travel and hiking tips lots of general information and news on the subject megaliths, power stations, landscape mythology, geomancy and Celts ... ”
Site includes numerous photos and information on site locations within selected cantons.
English translation via Google
The Lake Dwellings of Switzerland and other Parts of Europe By Dr. Ferdinand Keller.
Translated and arranged by John Edward Lee, FSA, FGS London: Longmans. 1866
Download the complete book in PDF format from Google Books