On January 17, archaeologists in Norway said they had found the world’s oldest rune stone. The flat rock is etched with runes. These are letters from an ancient Scandinavian language. They could have been carved 2,000 years ago.
“This may be one of the first attempts to use runes in Norway and Scandinavia on stone,” Kristel Zilmer says. She’s a professor at the University of Oslo, in Norway.
The stone has markings on it. Not all of them make sense. Some of the letters spell Idiberug. That could be the name of a person or a family.
Zilmer calls the discovery “the most sensational thing that I, as an academic, have had.” The rune stone will be on show for a month. It will be at the Museum of Cultural History, in Oslo.