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Bronze age axe head is found

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Published Date: 31 January 2005
A bronze age axe head and a fossilised horse tooth were just two historical items taken along to a Finds Day at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery recently.
Members of the public were invited along to the Terrace Road museum to have their finds inspected and recorded for the national Portable Antiquities Scheme database.

Finds Liaison Officer Rachel Atherton said: "What we are trying to do is build up an idea of what people are finding across the country so it can be recorded and used by anyone from archaeologists to people researching their local history."

The bronze age axe head, which was found using a metal detector in Whaley Bridge last week, is believed to date from between 1600 BC and 1200 BC.

Another interesting find was the fossilised horse tooth, which pre-dates the last ice age. This was found in a swallow hole near Hartington.

Rachel will be running another Finds Day at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery on Saturday April 23.

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