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Irish farmer finds near 60-pound slab of ancient bog butter on his land by ‘pure luck’

A strange object with a “cheesy” smell turned out to be an ancient discovery, one of the largest of iꦉts kind inꦛ Ireland. 

Oftentimes, ancient discoveries come out o🦂f archaeological s๊ites, but sometimes, they can be found right in your own backyard. 

That’s how Micheal Boyle’s story went.

Boyle was conducting work on his faꦅrm in County Donegal, when he found what turned out to be an ancient slab of bog butt෴er.

Inꦍ ancient times, dairy or animal fat was buried in bogs for preservation or𒆙 put in a wooden container as an offering to gods or spirits, . 

The slab of bog butter on Boyle’s farm had a small piece of wood on the bottom, Boyle .

This likely indicates th♑at the bog butter once lay in ♚a wooden container that has since decomposed. 

The unearthing of bog butter is fairly common in Ireland an꧋d in Scotland, with around 500 finds recorded in Ireland. 

This find was especially unique in its large size, and it could very well be “one of the biggest chunks of bog butter found in Ireland to date,” according to Paula Harvey, an archaeologist who visited the site, according to The Irish News.

Bog butter chunks are usually around the size of a mixing ༒bowl.

Harvey explained, but this one was between 22 kg and 25 kg (around 48 and 55 lbs.) in w♚eight, according to The Irish Examin♕er. 

Ireland
The discovery is one of the largest of its kind in Ireland. mammuth

“It was just by pure luck that we came across it,” Boyle said, per the Irish Examiner. 

Boyle explained to the outlet that he had seen something about a foot in the ground, and was quickly encompassed with a “cheesy smell.” 

Right away, Boyle said he knew what he had discovere🔯d.

“It does taste like butter, an unsalted butter at that. I had a sliver, and I’m still here to tell the tale,” Harvey said of the find, according to The Irish News. 

Historians say that the ancien🎉t bog butter could date back to the Bronze Age, according to the Irish Examiner, but more research is being done at the National Mus🥂eum of Ireland.

It is hoped that once the analysis is complete, it will be✤ displayed at the Kilclooney Dolmen Centre.

“The slab of butter wouldn’t mean anything to anybody visiting a national institution,” Harvey explained, according to The Irish News, “but it certainly would mean an awful lot to the local community here in south west Donegal.”