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Study Reinterprets Scandinavia's Largest Mound as Disaster Response, Not Tomb

Raknehaugen, built around 551 CE, served as a disaster-response monument after a major landslide and climate crisis, not as an elite burial, researchers say.

  • On Sunday, Dr. Lars Gustavsen published a study in the European Journal of Archaeology reinterpreting Raknehaugen, Scandinavia's largest prehistoric mound, as built around 551 CE for landslide protection rather than elite burial.
  • LiDAR scans revealed an ancient landslide scar stretching 12,467 feet, prompting Gustavsen to posit the mound served as communal response to the 536 CE Dust Veil climatic crisis and subsequent landscape instability.
  • Excavations in 1939 and 1940 discovered 25,000 logs with no central burial, leading analyst Ording to describe the assemblage as "unusually ugly." These findings contradicted traditional burial-mound interpretation.
  • The study shifts interpretation from elite-burial to collective catastrophe management, suggesting sixth-century societies used monumental construction to manage psychological and physical impacts of environmental upheaval.
  • Reinterpreting Raknehaugen will reshape Scandinavian archaeological research priorities and conservation decisions, shifting how museums and heritage sites frame Iron Age responses to environmental crisis and communal ritual.
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Phys.org broke the news in United Kingdom on Saturday, March 28, 2026.
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