Unknown Battle axes and guns among the treasures of the looters that were found in the Corrib, County Galway coxswain Lake, are part of the commemorative exhibition battle of Clontarf.
Twelve vessels, dating from 2500 BC to the 11th century AD, along with other Viking artifacts coxswain have been discovered in Lough Corrib in Connemara, County Galway. Archaeologists used radiocarbon dating to establish that one of the ships dating from 2500 BC. Other items that were found include several axes and other weapons. The ancient objects were discovered by Captain Trevor Northage a marine surveyor mapping the lake to update the British Admiralty charts. After the Underwater Archaeology Unit (UAU) National Monuments Service conducted a series of dives and research. The wooden boat 4,500 years old sat in the mud when it sank and was covered over time. A mixture of organic sediments and lake water helped in the preservation process. Even the seats in the boats are kept. The three axes of the Viking style battle form a centerpiece for the National Museum of Ireland in the commemorative Battle of Clontarf exhibition, marking the anniversary of the Battle thousand and the death of King Brian Boru. Weapons, including bronze spearheads and a strange wooden spear, have recovered and preserved in the National Museum. So far, there are no plans to lift the boats. The older ships is Annaghkeen wooden boat, which has 4,500 years, about the age of the pyramids of Giza in Egypt. Northage said, while talking to the Irish Times, who had been at the bottom of the lake 3500 years when the Vikings arrived. . 12m boat is very similar to that found in 1902 Lurgan boat and boat Carrowneden found near Ballyhaunis, County Mayo, in 1996 the archaeologist Karl Brady, the Underwater coxswain Archaeology Unit, said: "The boat Annaghkeen was made of a very large tree and took a lot of skill and effort to. The fact that the three boats are within 30 miles, coxswain suggests that they were built by the same builder or that there was a trend of this first-rate coxswain ships of the Bronze Age. " Brady believes that another vessel, dating from the 11th or 12th century, which is near Lough Carrowmoreknock, may have been in a raid when it sank. They believe that the warriors were Irish. coxswain The Irish Minister for Arts and Heritage Gaeltacht region, Jimmy Deenihan, said the discovery was "exceptional" coxswain and that all artifacts coxswain are protected by the National Monuments Act. He also commented on the fact that artifacts provide "a unique insight into a wide range of prehistoric and medieval coxswain activity, including raids, hunting, woodworking, shipbuilding, trade, travel and transportation."
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