The Mysterious Bronze Objects that Have Baffled Archaeologists for Centuries
One August day in 1987, Brian Campbell was refilling the hole left by a tree stump in his yard in Romford, East London, when his shovel struck something metal. He leaned down and pulled the object from the soil, wondering at its strange shape. The object was small smaller than a tennis ball and caked with heavy clay. My first impressions,” Campbell tells Mental Floss, “were it was beautifully and skillfully made & probably by a blacksmith as a measuring tool of sorts.
Campbell placed the artifact on his kitchen windowsill, where it sat for the next 10 or so years. Then, he visited the Roman fort and archaeological park in Saalburg, Germany and there, in a glass display case, was an almost identical object. He realized that his garden surprise was a Roman dodecahedron: a 12-sided metal mystery that has baffled archaeologists for centuries. Although dozens, and perhaps hundreds, of explanations have been offered to account for the dodecahedrons, no one is certain just what they were used for.
via getpocket.com
In England you dream of finding an ancient artifact. In America you dream of finding gold.