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Viking Age ship burial may be hiding beneath Norwegian farm, iron rivets hint

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Dozens of iron rivets scattered around a farmer's field in Norway could be part of a Viking ship burial, archaeologists say.

In 2015, a metal detectorist discovered three of the rivets while exploring Jarlsberg Manor in southeastern Norway. After the detectorist alerted authorities to the find, a team of archaeologists equipped with metal-detecting equipment descended on the field and unearthed seven more rivets, Science Norway reported.

Now, nearly nine years later, archaeologists have unearthed a total of 70 rivets. Based on the size of the metal pieces, researchers think the rivets were used to hold together wood planks measuring about 8 feet (2.5 meters) long, suggesting a fairly large Viking Age ship was buried there.

"We've found a great variation of rivets, with the longer ones so big that they must have come from a large ship," excavation leader Christian Løchsen Rødsrud, an adviser for the Museum of Cultural History at the University of Oslo in Norway, told Live Science. "The larger ones are comparable to other buried ships we've found at Gokstad and Oseberg," two other sites with burial mounds in Norway.

Rødsrud estimates that the ship was between 49 and 75 feet (15 and 23 m) long. However, researchers cannot estimate a date for the ship because there is no surviving organic matter they can radiocarbon-date.

Related: Oldest known ship burial discovered in Norway predates Vikings

"We've tested the topsoil but haven't found anything yet," Rødsrud said. "I would estimate that it's from sometime between A.D. 750 and 1000."

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