Amazing Facts About Historical Artifacts

September 23, 2017 | Rachel Seigel

Amazing Facts About Historical Artifacts


“But that was the trouble with ancient artifacts - no one really knew what they did.”

― Patricia Briggs, Wolfsbane

The public is fascinated by the discovery of ancient artifacts and they love to imagine what those artifacts might have been used for. Once in a while, an artifact is uncovered that puzzles archaeologists and scientists alike. There is no explanation of where it came from, what it’s for, or even what value it holds. Below are 45 amazing facts about historical artifacts.


Historical Artifacts Facts

 44. The Balls

Stone Spheres known as Las Bolas (The Balls) are scattered throughout the Diquis Delta of southern Costa Rica. They were the works of a pre-Columbian civilization, and are mostly made from a rock that forms from molten magma. There has been some speculation that they were used for astronomical purposes or that they pointed the way to significant places. No one knows for sure however, as the people who once populated the area vanished during the Spanish conquest.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

43. Aliens in China

In 1938, archaeologist Dr. Chi Pu Tu discovered an ancient cave in Baian-Kara-Ula, China. Buried in the cave were hundreds of ancient stone discs similar to records, with a spiral composed of tiny hieroglyphics. and when the glyphs were translated, they told a story of a spaceship that crashed into the mountains, piloted by a race called the Dropa. Russian researchers requested the discs for study, but as of today, nobody knows where the discs are stored or what final conclusions were drawn.

Historical Artifacts FactsFlickr

Advertisement

42. How is That Possible?

A fossil of a human handprint was found inside limestone that was estimated to be 110 million years old. This is way before modern humans were thought to have evolved on Earth. A fossilized human finger found in the Canadian arctic also dates back about 100 million years. Both suggest that humanity is older than we think, but it has yet to be proven.

Historical Artifacts FactsPixabay

41. Ancient Light Bulb

Beneath the Temple of Hathor at Dendera, Egypt is a sculpture depicting figures standing around a large, light-bulb like object. Erich Von Daniken, author of Chariot of the Gods created a working model of the bulb, which, when connected to a power source, emits an eerie purplish light.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

40. Burnt Mounds

Nearly 6000 mysterious artifacts known as fulachtai fia were found in the waterways and marshes of Ireland and the UK (where they are called burnt mounds) that  date back to the middle-bronze age. A fulacht fiadh is a horsehoe mound of soil and a stone surrounding a hollow piece of ground large enough to park a car on. They are usually found far from settlements, which would make them difficult to get to. People have suggested that they were used for cooking, or even breweries, saunas or sweathouses, but no conclusive answers have ever been found.

Historical Artifacts FactsFlickr

Advertisement

39. A Mysterious Mechanism

Archaeologists found a circular bronze artifact in the wreckage of a 2,000 year-old Greek cargo ship, and it’s the most sophisticated device ever found from that period. The artifact, known as the Antikythera mechanism, contains a maze of interlocking gears and mysterious characters etched over its exposed faces. It was originally believed to have been a navigational astrolabe, but its true purpose remains unknown. It’s thought to have at the very least been an intricate astronomical calendar.

Historical Artifacts FactsFlickr

38. But Does it Fly?

In 1898, a bird-shaped artifact made of sycamore wood was discovered during the excavation of the Pa-di-Imen tomb in Saqqara, Egypt.  It dates back to somewhere around 200 BC, and weighs just under 40 grams. There is no documentation to explain exactly what this artifact was for, but the Ancient Egyptians were fascinated with the principals of flight, and some believe it is possible it’s possible that it could glide like a hawk.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

 

37. An Unusual Rock

The discovery of a rock is not in itself unusual, but the three metal prongs sticking out of it are. A man by the name of John Williams found the object while hiking in a remote, rural area, and appears to be some kind of an electrical conductor. The artifact, known as the Petradox could be as much as 100,000 years old. Scientists are still trying to determine how the object was made.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

 

Advertisement

36. A History of Kings

The King List is a history of kingships dating back to pre-history of the Sumerian people. Researchers originally thought that they were straightforward historical documents, but as they found more complete versions, they realized that the kings were either partly or wholly mythological. There were numerous important omissions, and some histories had mythological accounts attached to them. Historians are still trying to understand why the Sumerians would have created a fictitious history, but some people like to speculate that the long reigns of the early kings were true, and they were gods or even aliens.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

Factinate

Sign up to our newsletter.

History’s most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily. Making distraction rewarding since 2017.

Thank you!
Error, please try again.

35. The Devil’s Bible

The Codex Gigas is the world’s largest known ancient manuscript. It’s often referred to as the Devil’s bible, due to a full-page illustration of the Devil and the legends that surround the book. The legend says that the book was written by a monk who made a deal with the devil to save his life after being sentenced to death by being walled in alive. With the Devil’s help, he wrote the book in a single night, despite the fact that it would take an estimated 5 years of non-stop labor to complete at the time. Some scholars believe that the Codex Gigas originally came from the Benedictine monastery of Podlazice (in the modern Czech Republic) and that it was taken by the Swedish army in the Thirty Years’ War.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

34. Solid Aluminum

In 1974, workers digging trenches along the Mures river discovered an object that was composed of 89% aluminum, with traces of copper, zinc, lead, and other elements. Aluminum is a manufactured element, and wasn’t produced in large quantities until the 1800s, but analysis dated this object at 300-400 years old. How and why it was made is unknown, but as it’s unavailable for public viewing or analysis, it’s likely we’ll never know.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

Advertisement

33. Big Giant Head

Between 1400 and 400 BCE, an ancient civilization known as the Olmec thrived in the area now known as Guatemala. They left behind a number of artifacts, and in the 1950s, a photograph emerged of a giant stone head. What was strange about the head was that it had Caucasian features, and didn’t resemble any other heads created by Central American civilizations. When an archaeologist travelled to the area in the 1980s to examine the object, all he found was that it had been used for target practice by rebel troops. As a result, the mystery of its creation remains unsolved.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

32. Simple Machines

Metal springs, eyelets, spirals and other metal objects were found in layers of 100,000-year-old sediment. The objects could be between 20,000 and 100,000 years old, but people only started working with metal 9,000 years ago. So where did these objects come from? Nobody knows, but it’s possible that they are a product of another long-lost civilization.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

31. 2000-year-old Battery

The Baghdad Battery is a 5.5 inch clay vessel with a copper cylinder inside, held in place by asphalt. Within the cylinder was an oxidized iron rod. Scientists initially speculated that it could have been a battery, since filling it with acid or an alkaline substance would have created an electric charge. Modern archaeologists have dismissed the theory, and believe that it was merely for storage.

Historical Artifacts FactsFlickr

Advertisement

30. Prehistoric Labyrinth

Prehistoric people, as early as 3000 B.C., used the Bolshoi Zayatsky Island in Russia to build villages. The villages were complete with sacred sites and even an irrigation system.  The most mysterious construction left by these people are the many stone labyrinths found in the area. They are built of two rows of boulders overgrown with vegetation, and there are at least 13 on the island, and about 35 in total. Only 300 ancient labyrinths are known to exist world-wide, but exactly what they were used for is unknown.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

 

29. Older than History

The London Hammer was discovered in 1934 or 1936, by a couple taking a walk. While on their walk, they noticed a rock with a piece of wood protruding from its core. They took the rock home, and cracked it open, discovering a primitive hammer inside. A team of archaeologists examined the find, and determined that the rock was more than 400 million years old. The hammer itself is believed to be older than that, and could be as old as 500 million years.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

28. Polonnaruwa Meteorite

The Polonnaruwa meteorite supposedly fell to Earth in late 2012. The team that examined the object claimed that it contained algae from another planet, and suggested that first life on Earth could have been delivered in a similar fashion. Other experts have disputed the theory, and said that the algae is from Earth and proves nothing. The debate is still ongoing.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

Advertisement

27. Ring of Stones

The prehistoric monument known as Stonehenge is one of the world’s most famous and mysterious landmarks. The ring of stones were erected approximately 4,000 years ago, and was quite an amazing feat for a supposedly primitive civilization. There are numerous theories about its original purpose and construction, but none have ever been conclusively proven.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

26. Unidentifiable Metal Objects

Since humans, and certainly not metal-workers, were not around 65 million years ago, scientists have been unable to come up with an explanation for the semi-ovoid metallic tubes dug out of a 65-million-year-old Cretaceous chalk in France. In 1885, a metal cube was found inside a block of coal, and in 1912, an iron pot was discovered in a large chunk of coal. Some people think this is possible evidence for  intelligent beings existing on Earth well before recorded history, or perhaps our dating methods are  less accurate at this scale.

Historical Artifacts FactsFlickr

25. Unbreakable Code

Twenty-four mysterious carvings have been discovered on Easter Island (famous for its giant head statues), and so far, nobody has been able to decipher what the glyphs on the carvings mean. Cracking the glyphs could provide answers as to why the early civilization of Easter Island collapsed, but some people believe that they don’t mean anything and are just decoration. Some theories also suggest that only village elders or religious elders knew the script, which could explain its disappearance.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons, Ian Sewell

Advertisement

24. Kites

The low stone walls crisscrossing the deserts of Egypt, Israel and Jordan have puzzled scientists ever since their discovery in the early 20th century. The chain of walls run up to 40 miles long, and have been nicknamed kites by scientists for their appearance in the air.  A recent study suggests that they were constructed as animal traps, and would lure animals towards a small pit where they could be killed. If true, then ancient hunters knew more about the behaviour of local animals than was previously thought.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

22. Hidden Treasure

An ancient copper scroll was discovered at the archaeological site of Qumran in 1952 that possibly describes a hidden treasure of gold and silver. The scroll dates back nearly 2000 years, but nobody knows where the treasure is hidden or if it actually exists.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

21. How Did He Know?

The Piri Reis map was discovered by historians in 1929. It was drawn in 1513 by Pri Reis- an admiral of the Turkish Navy, and showed Europe, North Africa, the coast of Brazil, several islands, and Antarctica, which supposedly wasn’t discovered for 300 more years. Most puzzling was that it showed Antarctica in great detail, and not covered in ice. The last time that occurred was 6000 years ago, so how this Turkish admiral from 500 years ago could produce a map like this is quite a mystery.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

20. Witch Bottles

While digging the site of the Civil War Centre in Nottinghamshire in 2014, scientists made a strange discovery. They uncovered a green glass bottle of about 15cm (5.9 in) in diameter, that was likely used as a ‘witch bottle’. Witch bottles were popular in England and America in the late 1600s when people were most afraid of witchcraft. About 200 of these objects have been found, and they often contained pins, fingernails, needles, hair or even urine. The bottles were believed to protect their owners against the evil influence of witches. Because they were generally used in secret, little documentation on them exists.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

19. UFO or Something Else?

One day in 2013, in the Russian City of Vladivostok, a local discovered a piece of coal with an embedded metal object resembling a toothed rod. The object was 98% aluminum and 2% magnesium, which was odd, since the coal deposit was over 300 million years old. Some people believe that it was from alien visitors, but it’s more likely that the object broke off of a piece of mining equipment and became embedded in the coal.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

 

18. Shroud of Christ

A long piece of twill cloth believed to be the burial shroud of Jesus Christ was officially recorded by the Catholic Church in 1353, which is when the cloth showed up at a church in France. The legend of the shroud dates back to A.D. 30 or 33, but radiocarbon dating debunks the theory and dates it at 1260-1390 A.D. Some critics argue that scientists only dated newer portions of the cloth stitched together after the death of Christ, which would explain why it seems newer than it is.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

Advertisement

17. The Lost Arc

Fans of the Indiana Jones movie franchise will remember Indie’s famous search for the Ark of the Covenant, but in real life, nobody has ever found the actual relic. Some reports suggest that it was buried in Jerusalem, and others say it was destroyed along with the first temple. A recently translated Hebrew text suggests that the arc will reveal itself, but not until “the coming of the Messiah”.

Historical Artifacts FactsFlickr

 

16. Desert Lines

The Nazca Lines are giant glyphs carved into the ground located in a Peruvian desert. The glyphs cover more than 450 square km and each one measures more than 200m in length. The drawings depict geometrical figures, animals and figures that might have been constellations. Scientists believe they were created by the ancient Nasca people who lived between 1 and 700 A.D. but their exact purpose is still unknown.

Historical Artifacts FactsPixabay

15. Potbelly Hill

In the Urfa plain of southeast Turkey, there is a temple whose ruins are thought to be the oldest known organized place of worship in the world. Gobekli Tepe (Potbelly Hill), named for the mound it’s buried under, was discovered in the mid 1990s by Klaus Schmidt, and is about 5000 years older than Stonehenge. Schmidt and his successor believe that the ruins were a site for religious rituals, but others believe it was a home for some of the region’s first settlers.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

Advertisement

14. The Book No One Could Read

The Voynich manuscript was discovered by an antique book dealer in 1912, but it’s written in an unknown alphabet that nobody can read. The book dates back 600 years, and was likely written in central Europe. Some scholars believe that it lays out some kind of code, but according to a professor of linguistics who supposedly deciphered some of the characters, it’s likely an essay on nature written in an ancient near Eastern or Asian language.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

13. Bronze Age Treasures

In 1929, a worker who was repairing a sewage ditch in China uncovered multiple jade and stone artifacts. In 1986, two more pits of Bronze Age treasures were uncovered in the area, including jade, elephant tusks, and bronze sculptures. Researchers believe that members of the Sanxingdui civilization (which collapsed 3000 years ago) made the artifacts, but why they buried so many valuable artifacts or why the civilization collapsed is unknown.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

12. Biblical Boat

For centuries, archaeologists from all around the world have claimed to have found evidence of Noah’s Ark on or around the mountain in Turkey where the boat allegedly came to rest. Some researchers doubt that the arc even existed, making it an archaeological mystery.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

11. A City Built on Corals

Somewhere between 200 BC and 800 A.D., the city of Nan Madol was built on a coral reef near Micronesia. The city consisted of roughly 100 artificial islands, made from huge basalt blocks and connected with viaducts. How the blocks were quarried, transported and placed is a mystery. Even by today’s standards, this was a remarkable engineering feat, and there are few clues to explain what happened to the civilization that put them there.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikipedia

10. Hand-Sized Statuettes

The Ubaid statues of Iraq were found mostly in Tell Al’Ubaid, as well as in Ur and Eridu. They are hand-sized statuettes depicting lizard or snakelike people in various poses, and many believe they depict serpent-related gods. Since there is virtually no contextual information surrounding the sites, no one knows exactly what they were for.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

9. Big Circles

2000-year-old Stone Circles in the Jordanian countryside have puzzled scientists for years. Known as the “big circles”, these structures are 400m in diameter, but just a few feet high. There are no openings for people or animals to walk through, which makes their purpose even more mysterious.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

8. Underwater Structure

Scientists discovered a large stone structure beneath the Sea of Galillee in Israel in 2003, which is made up of tiny stones placed on top of each other. The structure weighs an estimated 60,000 tons, and is nearly 32 feet high. Scientists have no idea what it might have been used for, but it’s possible they may have been originally land-based and submerged underwater due to rising sea levels.

Historical Artifacts FactsPxHere

7. Ancient Artwork

The Cochono Stone in Scotland is 43 feet by 26 feet, and contains swirling patterns that have also been identified on other prehistoric sites around the world. The stone is 5000 years old, and may have been an example of ancient artwork, but it’s exact purpose is unknown.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

6. Greater than the Great Wall

Located at the northern edge of the former Inca Capital Cuzco, the Sacsayhuaman walls were built more than 3500 metres above sea level. The walls were constructed between 1438-1471 CE, and is believed to have needed over 20,000 labourers to complete. No mortar or cement was used to bind the walls, but they are placed so tightly that even a sheet of paper couldn’t be wedged between the blocks. Scientists have tried for years to replicate this feat on a smaller scale and failed, leading them to wonder how it was designed and constructed.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

5. Strangely Shaped Objects

Dodecahedrons, so called after their unusual shape, are hollow stones or bronze objects about 4–12 centimeters (1.5–5 in) in diameter, with 12 flat pentagonal faces, holes of varying sizes on each face, and small knobs sticking out of each corner. They date back to the Roman empire, but nobody has ever found a record of what they did. Some people think they were instruments of war, while others believe they were either farming tools or a knitting aid.

Historical Artifacts FactsWikimedia Commons

4. Super Monument

Located just 2 miles from Stonehenge, Super-Henge is a mammoth stone monument made up of a collection of stone monoliths. Archaeologists aren’t sure what the stones’ original purpose was, but they do believe that they stood upright before being pushed over 4500 years ago.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

3. A Jar full of Holes

The discovery of a holey jar (literally a jar full of holes) was a first for researchers. The jar was recovered from a bomb crater outside of London, and dates back to Roman Britain between 43-410 A.D. Researchers believe it could have been used as a lamp or an animal cage, but these theories are really just educated guesses.

Historical Artifacts FactsShutterstock

Advertisement

2. 15 Million-Year-Old Shoe

A shoe-print fossil discovered in a seam of coal in Fisher Canyon, Nevada is believed to be about 15 million-years-old. There is no explanation for how it got there, but scientist speculate that humans or something like us existed earlier than we think or coal does not take as long to form as scientists think.

Historical Artifacts FactsPixabay

1. Rat King

A rat king is formed when several rats have their tails fused or tied together, creating a horde of rats facing outward from the central knot, seemingly forced to act as one composite beast. The largest of these artifacts contains 32 rats, and is stored in the Mauritianum Museum in Altenburg, Germany. Mice Kings and Squirrel Kings have also been reported.

Twisted FactsFlickr

Sources
1, 2, 3, 4, 5,

 


More from Factinate

Featured Article

My mom never told me how her best friend died. Years later, I was using her phone when I made an utterly chilling discovery.

Dark Family Secrets

Dark Family Secrets Exposed

Nothing stays hidden forever—and these dark family secrets are proof that when the truth comes out, it can range from devastating to utterly chilling.
April 8, 2020 Samantha Henman

Featured Article

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.

Madame de Pompadour Facts

Entrancing Facts About Madame de Pompadour, France's Most Powerful Mistress

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.
December 7, 2018 Kyle Climans

More from Factinate

Featured Article

I tried to get my ex-wife served with divorce papers. I knew that she was going to take it badly, but I had no idea about the insane lengths she would go to just to get revenge and mess with my life.

These People Got Genius Revenges

When someone really pushes our buttons, we'd like to think that we'd hold our head high and turn the other cheek, but revenge is so, so sweet.
April 22, 2020 Scott Mazza

Featured Article

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but few people know her even darker history.

Catherine of Aragon Facts

Tragic Facts About Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s First Wife

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but very few people know her even darker history.
June 7, 2018 Christine Tran



Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.