Archaeologists said on Friday they had discovered a lost burial
ground during excavations for a massive new rail project in London which
might hold the bodies of some 50,000 people who were killed by the
"Black Death" plague more than 650 years ago.
Thirteen skeletons,
laid out in two careful rows, were found 2.5 meters (8.2 feet) below the
road in the Farringdon area of central London by researchers working on
the 16 billion pound ($24 billion) Crossrail project.
Historical
records had indicated the area, described as a "no man's land", had once
housed a hastily established cemetery for victims of the bubonic plague
which killed about the third of England's population following its
outbreak in 1348.
Read Rail dig may have found London's lost 'Black Death' graves for more details
fascinating!
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