Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Phil Campbell, longtime Motörhead guitarist, dead at 64

Phil Campbell, longtime Motörhead guitarist, dead at 64

March 14, 2026
Could There Be a Crossover Between Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’? (Exclusive)

Could There Be a Crossover Between Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’? (Exclusive)

March 14, 2026
Glen Davis released from prison early after 40-month sentence for fraud: ‘I’m back, baby’

Glen Davis released from prison early after 40-month sentence for fraud: ‘I’m back, baby’

March 14, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Phil Campbell, longtime Motörhead guitarist, dead at 64
  • Could There Be a Crossover Between Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’? (Exclusive)
  • Glen Davis released from prison early after 40-month sentence for fraud: ‘I’m back, baby’
  • Obama Foundation seeks 100 unpaid volunteers for $850M center opening
  • 25 Things You Don’t Know About Kurt Russell: Goldie Hawn, Princess Diana, UFO Discovery and More
  • Big questions still loom for Jets as Darren Mougey’s offseason overhaul takes shape
  • Vertically challenged? 4 health benefits of being short
  • Lindsey Graham praises Trump’s ‘bold’ takeover of Kharg Island, attempt to close Strait of Hormuz — offers warning of ‘peril’ to Iran
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Eerie ‘sand burials’ of elite Anglo-Saxons and their ‘sacrificed’ horse discovered near UK nuclear power plant
Eerie ‘sand burials’ of elite Anglo-Saxons and their ‘sacrificed’ horse discovered near UK nuclear power plant
Science

Eerie ‘sand burials’ of elite Anglo-Saxons and their ‘sacrificed’ horse discovered near UK nuclear power plant

News RoomBy News RoomJanuary 19, 20262 ViewsNo Comments

Archaeologists in the U.K. have discovered a 1,400-year-old burial ground that contains “sand burials” of two elite people and a horse dating to Anglo-Saxon times.

The archaeological team from Oxford Cotswold Archaeology found “at least 11 burial mounds, known as barrows, along with cremation and inhumation burials,” they wrote in a statement. The researchers found the burial ground ahead of the construction of a nuclear power plant near the village of Sizewell, which is in the eastern English district of Suffolk.

The site has acidic soil, which tends to degrade bone, but in two graves the outlines of skeletons were found. One grave had the outline of a horse while the other had the outlines of two people. These remnants are known as sand burials, as it looks like the individuals were made out of sand.


You may like

The burials, even the horse’s, contained grave goods.

“The horse was buried with its tack [riding gear] still on its head and shoulders that comprised [pieces] of copper alloy decoration and a probable iron bit in its mouth,” Maria Bellissimo, a spokesperson at Oxford Cotswold Archaeology, told Live Science in an email. The two people “were buried with a sword, a spear, two shields, an iron banded bucket, along with a copper and a silver vessel.”

Although the sand burials hold important clues, they don’t impart as much information as a preserved skeleton would.

“We cannot tell their age as accurately” from their sandy silhouettes as experts could from a skeleton, Bellissimo said, “but it looks like they were both probably full-grown adults.” The sex of the two people is unknown, but “our evidence indicates that the two individuals were buried at the same time and so it’s very likely they died at the same time,” Bellissimo said.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

A shield boss was found with the two buried people. It would have been attached to the center of a shield. (Image credit: Copyright Oxford Cotswold Archaeology)

Their cause of death is also a mystery. “We can postulate that the horse was probably sacrificed to be interred with its owners, who we assume to be the two individuals in the adjacent grave,” she said.

They appear to date to the sixth or seventh century A.D., a time when England was divided into several kingdoms. It’s not clear who these people were, but the “weaponry, the horse and the copper and silver items within the grave as well as them being buried in a burial mound [suggest] that these were elite individuals,” Bellissimo said.

Howard Williams, a professor of archaeology at the University of Chester in the U.K. who was not involved with the excavations, said that the burials are located on a ridge that is “prominent in the local landscape for those travelling inland” after landing at sea. At the time there “were maritime communities connected by trade and kinship along England’s east coast as well as connections inland across south-east Britain.”


You may like

Looking down at the pouch of coins.

This coin hoard consists of more than 300 coins and was found near the nuclear power plant site. It dates to several centuries after the sand burials. (Image credit: Copyright Oxford Cotswold Archaeology)

The new discovery promises “to add important information to our understanding of the practices and beliefs of these people who [were] part of the emerging East Anglian kingdom in the centuries after the collapse of the Roman province of Britannia,” Williams told Live Science in an email.

Archaeologists made additional discoveries during the excavation. One of them was a hoard of more than 300 silver coins that dates to the 11th century.

Found bundled in lead and cloth, the “hoard is believed to have been a savings pot buried by a local figure as a precaution during a time of significant social and political unrest” in the 11th century, the team wrote in the statement.

What’s more, experts identified a pottery kiln dating to the Roman period (A.D. 43 to 410), an oak ladder dating to the Iron Age (800 B.C. to A.D. 50), the remains of settlements from the Bronze Age (2300 to 800 B.C.), as well as numerous ovens from medieval times (600 to 1500). Research into the discoveries is ongoing.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

GPS is being weaponized in electronic warfare ‪—‬ and it’s putting ships at risk

GPS is being weaponized in electronic warfare ‪—‬ and it’s putting ships at risk

The appendix evolved at least 32 times across 361 species, so it’s ‘unlikely to be a useless evolutionary accident,’ research finds

The appendix evolved at least 32 times across 361 species, so it’s ‘unlikely to be a useless evolutionary accident,’ research finds

Roman military fort discovered in Scotland far north of Hadrian’s Wall

Roman military fort discovered in Scotland far north of Hadrian’s Wall

Pi has been calculated to trillions of digits ‪—‬ is that completely irrational?

Pi has been calculated to trillions of digits ‪—‬ is that completely irrational?

Science news this week: AMOC’s collapse signal, the sun’s galactic migration, the world’s smallest QR code and oil’s dying days

Science news this week: AMOC’s collapse signal, the sun’s galactic migration, the world’s smallest QR code and oil’s dying days

Garmin Venu 4 smartwatch review: A reliable everyday fitness tracker

Garmin Venu 4 smartwatch review: A reliable everyday fitness tracker

Reading AI summaries makes people more likely to buy something — despite alarming 60% hallucination rate

Reading AI summaries makes people more likely to buy something — despite alarming 60% hallucination rate

Can you see Earth’s shadow?

Can you see Earth’s shadow?

Microplastics that accumulate in the body may ‘clog up’ immune cells

Microplastics that accumulate in the body may ‘clog up’ immune cells

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Could There Be a Crossover Between Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’? (Exclusive)

Could There Be a Crossover Between Robyn Carr’s ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ and ‘Virgin River’? (Exclusive)

March 14, 2026
Glen Davis released from prison early after 40-month sentence for fraud: ‘I’m back, baby’

Glen Davis released from prison early after 40-month sentence for fraud: ‘I’m back, baby’

March 14, 2026
Obama Foundation seeks 100 unpaid volunteers for 0M center opening

Obama Foundation seeks 100 unpaid volunteers for $850M center opening

March 14, 2026
25 Things You Don’t Know About Kurt Russell: Goldie Hawn, Princess Diana, UFO Discovery and More

25 Things You Don’t Know About Kurt Russell: Goldie Hawn, Princess Diana, UFO Discovery and More

March 14, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Big questions still loom for Jets as Darren Mougey’s offseason overhaul takes shape

Big questions still loom for Jets as Darren Mougey’s offseason overhaul takes shape

March 14, 2026
Vertically challenged? 4 health benefits of being short

Vertically challenged? 4 health benefits of being short

March 14, 2026
Lindsey Graham praises Trump’s ‘bold’ takeover of Kharg Island, attempt to close Strait of Hormuz — offers warning of ‘peril’ to Iran

Lindsey Graham praises Trump’s ‘bold’ takeover of Kharg Island, attempt to close Strait of Hormuz — offers warning of ‘peril’ to Iran

March 14, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.