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Depiction of a female moose
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Depictions of moose
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Depiction of a male moose
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Rock carvings at Norrforsen
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Archeological site of the petroglyphs.
Norrforsen are rapids in the Ume River in Sweden, between the villages of Norrfors and Sörfors 15 kilometers west of Umeå. [1] The rapids are located downriver from the dam of the hydroelectric power station at Stornorrfors.
At Truthällorna, an island that is underwater when the upriver dam gates are opened, are a number of ancient rock carvings. The petroglyphs are believed to have been carved by hunter-gatherer people between 3,000-2,000 BCE. [2] [3] The carvings were discovered in 1984 by a group of archaeology students from Umeå University. [4]
The people made these carvings likely survived the winter in part by hunting moose (sv. älgar, also translated as elk). [4] The majority of the carvings depict moose along with images of boats, a human figure, and unidentified fragment carvings. [5] Note that these are petroglyphs (carvings) and not rock paintings; it is common to paint petroglyphs red in Scandinavia, to make them more visible. [6]
Norrforsen are rapids in the Ume River in Sweden, between the villages of Norrfors and Sörfors 15 kilometers west of Umeå. [1] The rapids are located downriver from the dam of the hydroelectric power station at Stornorrfors.
At Truthällorna, an island that is underwater when the upriver dam gates are opened, are a number of ancient rock carvings. The petroglyphs are believed to have been carved by hunter-gatherer people between 3,000-2,000 BCE. [2] [3] The carvings were discovered in 1984 by a group of archaeology students from Umeå University. [4]
The people made these carvings likely survived the winter in part by hunting moose (sv. älgar, also translated as elk). [4] The majority of the carvings depict moose along with images of boats, a human figure, and unidentified fragment carvings. [5] Note that these are petroglyphs (carvings) and not rock paintings; it is common to paint petroglyphs red in Scandinavia, to make them more visible. [6]