THE ENIGMA of a
            priceless Bronze Age disc seems to have been solved by a Hamburg
            scientist who has identified it as one of the world’s first
            astronomical clocks.
            
        
            The 3,600-year-old Sky Disc of Nebra, which surfaced four years ago
            when German grave robbers tried to sell it on the international
            market, shows that Bronze Age man had a sophisticated sense of time.
            
                     
            “We have been dramatically underestimating the prehistoric
            peoples,” said Harald Meller, chief archaeologist of Saxony-Anhalt,
            where the disc was found.
                     
            The bronze disc is about 30cm in diameter, has a blue-green patina
            and is inlaid with a gold sun, moon and 32 stars. Robbers using
            metal detectors found it in 1999 alongside a pile of bronze axes and
            swords in a prehistoric enclosure on top of a hill in deep forest
            112 miles (180km) southwest of Berlin.
            
         
            The Nebra settlement is close to Europe’s oldest observatory in
            Goseck. The site appears to have had deep spiritual significance in
            the Bronze Age. From the hill it is possible to see the sun set at
            every equinox behind the Brocken, the highest mountain peak of the
            Harz range. And there are about 1,000 barrows, burial grounds for
            warriors and princes, in the nearby forests.
            
         
            Since police tracked down the thieves in Switzerland in 2002,
            archaeologists and astronomers have been trying to puzzle out the
            disc’s function. Ralph Hansen, an astronomer in Hamburg, found
            that the disc was an attempt to co-ordinate the solar and lunar
            calendars. It was almost certainly a highly accurate timekeeper that
            told Bronze Age Man when to plant seeds and when to make trades,
            giving him an almost modern sense of time.
            
         
            Herr Hansen first tried to explain the thickness of the moon on the
            disc. “The crescent on the Sky Disc of Nebra seems to be
            equivalent to a four-day moon,” he said.
            
         
            He consulted the 7th and 6th century BC mul-apin collection of
            Babylonian documents in the British Museum. It appears that the
            users of the 3,600- year-old clock made similar calculations. The
            disc was used to determine when a 13th month should be added to the
            lunar year, which has shorter months than the solar year. Herr
            Maller said:  
            
         
            “Probably only a very small group of people understood the
            clock.”
            But the knowledge
            was somehow lost, and scientists say that the clock would have been
            used for only about 300 years. Herr Maller said: “In the end, the
            disc became a cult object.”