Boat discovery near Newgrange dates back 5,000 years

Boat discovery near Newgrange dates back 5,000 years

The discovery of a logboat in the Boyne river close to Newgrange dates back 5,000 years, it has been revealed.

Culture Minister Josepha Madigan announced on Friday that scientific dating of the boat found near the Bru na Boinne world heritage site dates to the Neolithic period.

Four local anglers found the prehistoric vessel in June 2016 while fishing on the river at Oldbridge in Co Meath and reported it to heritage authorities.

It measures three metres in length and would have been formed the base of the boat. It is thought it would have originally measured more than four metres in length and have been shaped out of the trunk of an oak tree using stone axes.

Newgrange boat discovery
Anglers made the discovery in 2016 (Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht/PA)

The National Monuments Service underwater archaeology unit and the National Museum of Ireland collaborated in recording the vessel and carefully removing it from the river bed to the museum, where it is currently undergoing conservation.

It is one of 11 logboats that have been found in the river but it is the first to date to the Neolithic period.

Ms Madigan thanked the anglers for reporting their find so quickly.

Newgrange boat discovery
The scene of the logboat find (Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht/PA)

“The importance of this discovery and the scientific date which has now been obtained for it lies in its contemporaneity with the building of the great passage tomb of Newgrange and the other wonderful passage tombs that dominate our world heritage site of Bru na Boinne.

“It is tempting to ponder the part such a vessel might have played in the construction of these burial monuments and the lives of those who built them, in ferrying people along the river, and transporting materials and stones used to build the great tombs.”

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