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Episode details

World Service,2 mins

The Viking-era treasure discovered totally be accident

Newshour

Available for over a year

A family in Norway were searching for a lost gold earring in their garden when they decided to get their metal detector out. They did not find the earring but did stumble upon something else: artefacts dating back more than 1,000 years. The Aasvik family dug up a bowl-shaped buckle and another item that appeared to be part of a Viking-era burial. Experts believe the artefacts were used in the ninth-century burial of a woman on the small island of Jomfruland. The discovery was made under a large tree in the centre of the family's garden on the island, off Norway's south coast. Experts knew there had been settlements on the island dating back hundreds of years, but evidence only went back to the Middle Ages. One expert concluded that the buckle dates from between AD780 and 850. Officials praised the Aasvik family for immediately telling authorities about the rare discovery. Newshour's James Menendez has been speaking to Vibeke Lia, the archaeologist who has been overseeing the site, and asked her how the treasure was found in the first place. Photo shows: Buckle dates from between 780 and 850. Credit: Rune Nordseter

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