Abstract
After the retreat of the Weichselian glaciers, Northern Europe was populated by highly mobile hunter-gatherer groups. Traces of these societies are difficult to find, hampering our understanding of their life. Some remote basins of the western Baltic Sea, however, only drowned in the Holocene, and it has recently been postulated, that they preserve architectures from the Stone Age, that did not survive on land. In 2021 we documented the Blinkerwall, a stonewall megastructure located in 21 m water depth in the Bay of Mecklenburg, Germany. Shipborne and autonomous underwater vehicle hydroacoustic data as well as optical images show that the wall is composed of about 1700 stones, predominantly less than 1 m in height, placed side by side over 971 m in a way that argues against a natural origin by glacial transport or ice push ridges. Combining this information with sedimentological samples, radiocarbon dates, and a geophysical reconstruction of the paleo-landscape, we suggest that the wall was likely used as a drive lane for hunting during the late Pleistocene or earliest Holocene. Ranging among the oldest hunting structures on Earth and the largest Stone Age structures in Europe, the Blinkerwall will become important for understanding subsistence strategies, mobility patterns, and inspire discussions concerning the territorial development in the Western Baltic Sea region.
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