Aesch dolmen

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Dolmen grave near Aesch
Dolmen grave near Aesch

The Aesch dolmen is located in the Aesch community forest in the Arlesheim district of the canton of Basel-Landschaft in Switzerland .

Only remnants are left of the 17 large, upright stone slabs that formed the dolmen's chamber . The chamber, measuring around 4 × 3 meters, was probably originally covered with stone slabs. With a height of 2 to 2.5 meters, the monument had a volume of around 24 to 30 cubic meters. The hill must have been about 4 m high and an outer diameter of 10 to 12 meters. The system was discovered by Karl Blarer in 1907 and examined by Paul Sarasin and Fritz Sarasin in 1907/09. In 1907 a few stones were found on the periphery, which must have marked the edge of the hill.

It may have been the common grave of a whole clan. The scanty remains of human bones - mostly teeth - belong to 14 children and 33 adults. Several pierced animal teeth served as pendants or amulets. The C14 dating carried out at the ETH Hönggerberg in Zurich in 1993 showed an age of around 4400 years, so the facility was around 2400 BC. Built in BC.

Typologically, the grave belongs to the Schwörstadt-type dolmens , as they are e.g. B. can also be found in Laufen , Courgenay , Degernau and Schwörstadt .

Sources and web links

Coordinates: 47 ° 28 '14 "  N , 7 ° 35' 49"  E ; CH1903:  611936  /  two hundred fifty-seven thousand seven hundred sixty-six