ancient-footprints-4

BREAKING NEWS – Lolland, Denmark – When a pair of fishermen waded into the frigid waters of the southern Baltic Sea about 5,000 years ago, they probably didn’t realize that the shifting seabed beneath their feet was recording their every move. But it was. The long-lost evidence of that prehistoric fishing trip two sets of human footprints and some Stone Age fishing gear was recently discovered in a dried up fjord, or inlet, on the island of Lolland in Denmark. There, archaeologists uncovered the prints alongside a so-called fishing fence, a tool that dates back to around 3,000 B.C. They concluded that it is now abundantly apparent that certain fishing traditions have not changed in thousands of years, after they also found two circular rows of imprints, with three circles in each row. Upon further research, archaeologists determined that they were a 5000 year old fossilized indentation of a six pack of beer.