A stone labyrinth on Högberget (High Mountain), 100 meters above sea level near Jävre, adjacent to a Bronze Age grave cairn. The surrounding landscape was an archipelago 3,500 years ago during the Bronze Age, before post-glacial land uplift transformed islands into hilltops. This geological memory — stone labyrinths marking ancient shorelines now far inland — is one of the most powerful dating tools for Scandinavian labyrinths. The Norrland coast labyrinth tradition stretches from Jävre south to Gävle. At Giza bearing 353.07°, 3,967 km from the Great Pyramid.
Labyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 11-Circuit
Circuits
11 paths, 12 walls
Material
stone
Age
~11th century CE
Condition
intact
Country
Sweden
Region
Norrbotten, near Piteå
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid