Artifacts from these places include Springmount’s wax tablet psalter and a possible shaman’s “snake staff” from a Comb Ceramic site. Excavations of these places revealed a coaxial (“co-AX-ee-al”) Neolithic field system at Céide (“KAY-duh”), anthropomorphic “pole god” figures in Braak, and meals of a knotweed gruel given to “triple deaths.” In one of these places, Cimbri (“KIM-bree”) possibly dismantled repoussé (“ruh-poo-SAY”) silver pieces that depict Cernunnos (“KAIR-noo-nohss”) and La Tène (“lah ten”) carnyx players. L’Anse aux Meadows (“LONCE oh meadows”) smelted limonite iron nodules from these places, which were spanned by “corduroy road” trackways. These places preserved the Gundestrup (“goo-neh-STROPE”) Cauldron and waxy butter. Nooses left on people in these places at Windeby (“VIN-duh-bee”) and Borremose (“BOR-uh-moo-zuh”) led P. V. Glob to interpret those bodies as Iron Age human sacrifices. For 10 points, the bodies of Lindow Man and Tollund Man were mummified in what anaerobic wetlands? ■END■
ANSWER: bogs [accept peat bogs, peatlands, raised bogs, quagmires, floating mats, moss bogs, or sphagnum bogs; accept moors or fens; accept bog bodies, bog people, bog butter, or bog iron; accept Borremose until read; prompt on wetlands until read; prompt on lakes, ponds, bodies of water, or equivalents of any by asking “what specific type of environment?”; reject “marshes” or “swamps”] (The first line refers to a staff from Järvensuo, Finland.)
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= Average correct buzz position