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50 Viking Age burials discovered in Denmark, including a woman in a rare 'Viking wagon'

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An extraordinary Viking burial ground with the almost-complete skeletons of roughly 50 people has been unearthed in Denmark during preparations to lay electrical cables.

The discoveries were made near the village of Åsum on the island of Funen over the past six months by archaeologists from Museum Odense, according to a statement.

Finding any human remains from the Viking Age (A.D. 793 to 1066) is rare, in part because Scandinavian soils are acidic and don't preserve bones well. So finding 50 burials from this time is exceptional.

"It is really unusual to find so many well-preserved skeletons at the same time as those found in Åsum," Michael Borre Lundø, an archaeologist who worked on the dig and a Museum Odense curator, said in the statement. "This discovery offers extraordinary opportunities to perform a wide range of scientific analyses, which can reveal more about the general Health, diet, and origins of those buried."

"The analyses might even reveal whether the buried vikings were related, which would be particularly significant, as this has never been examined in similar graves," he added.

Related: Vikings in Norway were much more likely to die violent deaths than those in Denmark

Viking graves

The Viking Age graves near Åsum date to the 900s, perhaps to when the Danish king Gorm "the Old" and queen Thyra ruled from the nearby Jutland town of Jelling. Historians disagree on where Gorm ruled, but it is generally accepted that the central island of Funen was part of his kingdom. The new finds show the importance of the region at the time, according to the archaeologists.

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