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In an unusual discovery, a team of researchers has found evidence that prehistoric people living in the lands of modern-day Scandinavia were performing sacrifices to appease their gods following a huge eruption that rocked the globe around 2,900 BC. What was unusual is that the sacrificial “victims” in this case were a collection of engraved stone plaques, which were apparently considered sacred.
In a new article published in the journal Antiquity, the researchers link the apparent disposal of objects they call “sun stones” to that terrifying and catastrophic eruption. This discovery offers some intriguing and surprising insights into the religious beliefs and ceremonial customs of Neolithic Europeans, showing how they responded to a natural disaster of sudden and epic proportions.