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Fig. 5S. Find No. 2. Emmerdennen (Drenthe), Tumulus | 1 of Bursch. 1. All amber; 2. Rock crystal; 3-4. Pottery. Scale 1:2. Tumulus plan re-drawn after Bursch.  The three-riveted grooved ogival dagger from Annertol,  necklacegraves andhoards in Drenthe, as the characteristic large disc and flattened-biconical forms are not presentin the Exloérmond find. The trapeze-shaped amber pendants are datable by reference to the Ammorican Tumulus grave of Kernonen-Plouvorm, with its eight examples. This lavishly furnished warrior’s grave contained, alongside typically Armorican Early Bronze Age furniture as well as various links with Wessex (cf. Gerloff, 1975: esp. p. 97), a wheel-headed pin of the earliest Central European variety (Type Speyer; Kubach, 1977: pp. 133-142, esp. p. 134, No. 130-7), which begins in the Lochham (Early Tumulus) phase; a related pin is in the Ségel-Wohlde period- hoard of Wildeshausen, Kr. Oldenburg in Northwest Germany (see under Find No. 12).  Further comments: The British-type (though atypically large) basal-looped spearhead also found in the peat atExloérmond (Butler, 1963a: p. 99, fig. 28b, p. 109, No. 4) should belong chronologically to Burgess Group IX rather than to Group VII, and would thus have  no connection with the hoard.

Figure 5 S. Find No. 2. Emmerdennen (Drenthe), Tumulus | 1 of Bursch. 1. All amber; 2. Rock crystal; 3-4. Pottery. Scale 1:2. Tumulus plan re-drawn after Bursch. The three-riveted grooved ogival dagger from Annertol, necklacegraves andhoards in Drenthe, as the characteristic large disc and flattened-biconical forms are not presentin the Exloérmond find. The trapeze-shaped amber pendants are datable by reference to the Ammorican Tumulus grave of Kernonen-Plouvorm, with its eight examples. This lavishly furnished warrior’s grave contained, alongside typically Armorican Early Bronze Age furniture as well as various links with Wessex (cf. Gerloff, 1975: esp. p. 97), a wheel-headed pin of the earliest Central European variety (Type Speyer; Kubach, 1977: pp. 133-142, esp. p. 134, No. 130-7), which begins in the Lochham (Early Tumulus) phase; a related pin is in the Ségel-Wohlde period- hoard of Wildeshausen, Kr. Oldenburg in Northwest Germany (see under Find No. 12). Further comments: The British-type (though atypically large) basal-looped spearhead also found in the peat atExloérmond (Butler, 1963a: p. 99, fig. 28b, p. 109, No. 4) should belong chronologically to Burgess Group IX rather than to Group VII, and would thus have no connection with the hoard.