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Mysterious Russian Statue Is 11000 Years Old (Photo)
Mysterious Russian Statue Is 11000 Years Old (Photo)

Mysterious Russian Statue Is 11000 Years Old (Photo)

A stunning wooden statue pulled from a Russian peat bog 125 years ago has been dated as being 11,000 years old after ‘sensational’ new analysis.

Called the Big Shigir Idol, the mysterious statue has baffled researchers for decades due to the coded hieroglyphics covering its surface. While some have surmised that it may contain stories on the creation of the world by ancient man, others believe it to be nothing more than decoration. One thing we do know for sure: this thing is old – really, really, old.

Back in 1997, an initial analysis using radiocarbon dating placed the Shigir Idol’s age at roughly 9,500 years. A new analysis this year using seven small wooden samples from the Idol placed inside an accelerated mass spectrometer determined it to be 11,000 years old. That’s more than twice the age of the Egyptian pyramids or Stonehenge.

“This is an extremely important data for the international scientific community. It is important for understanding the development of civilisation and the art of Eurasia and humanity as a whole,” Thomas Terberger, a professor at the Department of Cultural Heritage of Lower Saxony, said at a press conference earlier this week.

Mysterious Russian Statue Is 11000 Years Old (Photo)

Mysterious Russian Statue Is 11000 Years Old (Photo)

“We can say that in those times, 11,000 years ago, the hunters, fishermen and gatherers of the Urals were no less developed than the farmers of the Middle East,” he added.

Showing just how powerful new dating technology has become, the researchers also revealed that the Idol was made from a freshly-cut larch tree which was itself at least 157 years old.

But back to that mysterious code. A theoretical linguist who was actually brought in to help possibly discover its meaning chimed in on Reddit just why the whole thing is so puzzling.

“You asked if there’s anything that could lead to understanding it,” user kjoeleskapet wrote. “Here’s the not so fun part: No. At this point, our best bet is to have something else to compare it to. We figured out cuneiform and hieroglyphs because there werea lot of them. This guy survived as a freak coincidence during a time when apparently everything was made of wood. So unless there are a couple dozen more wooden idols in that peat bog, it’ll have to remain a mystery.”

The Big Shigir Idol can currently be viewed in its climate-controlled case at the Sverdlovsk Regional History Museum in Russian.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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