4,000-year-old flowers found at Bronze Age dig (Scotland)
Proof that pre-historic people placed bunches of flowers in the grave when they buried their dead has been found for the first time, experts have said.
Archaeologists have discovered a bunch of meadowsweet blossoms in a Bronze Age grave at Forteviot, south of Perth.
The dark brown heads were found, along with a clump of organic material which archaeologists now say is the stems of the flowers.
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Archaeologists have discovered a bunch of meadowsweet blossoms in a Bronze Age grave at Forteviot, south of Perth.
The dark brown heads were found, along with a clump of organic material which archaeologists now say is the stems of the flowers.
The bunch had been placed by the head of the high-status individual known to have been buried in the grave.
Diggers also found pieces from a birch bark coffin in the grave, and a bronze dagger with a gold hilt band.