Traces of a 3,000-year-old village were unearthed in the central Czech Republic during an investigation conducted ahead of a construction project.
According to Tomáš Zavoral, an archaeologist at the East Bohemian Museum in Pardubice, the settlement was semicircular in shape and had a small square and a well lined with wood.
Pottery, bones, and soil samples were collected from the site for dating and further analysis of the landscape.
Archaeologist Tomáš Zavoral of the East Bohemian Museum in Pardubice said that the settlement was semicircular in shape, and that it had a small square and a well lined with wood.
Author's summary: Archaeologists uncover 3,000-year-old village in Czech Republic.