Categories: Amazing Nature

Skeletons Found Under a Florida Wine Shop May Be Some of America’s First Colonists

Historians recently announced in Florida that several small children’s bones buried beneath underneath the last place one might think to look: a wine shop. However, there will be no police inquiry. The Florida wine store is situated in St. Augustine, the oldest city in the United States. Those bones, too? They are roughly as ancient as the city.

The archaeologists actually believe that these skeletal remains could have been among the first settlers in North America. In the past few weeks, researchers have found seven people including three children, in the ancient graveyard. According to the St. Augustine Register, one of them was a young white European woman.

The additional bones are currently being examined, but a ceramic piece discovered nearby shows that these people passed away between 1572 and 1586.

“What you’re dealing with is people who made St. Augustine what it is,” Carl Halbirt, St. Augustine city archaeologist, tells FirstCoast News. “You’re in total awe. You want to treat everything with respect, and we are.”

Archaeologists were able to dig underneath the building thanks to the effects of last year’s Hurricane Matthew, the flooding from which convinced the building’s owner that it was time to replace the wooden floor.

According to Smithsonian Magazine, the building’s floor was constructed in 1888, and the soil beneath the building has remained untouched since then, thus creating a virtual time capsule.

The building also happens to be built where the ancient Church of Nuestra Señora de la Remedios used to stand.

“The mission churches across Florida buried everybody in the church floor,” Ellsbeth Gordon, an architectural historian, told FirstCoast News. “It was consecrated ground, of course.”

Smithsonian claims that Sir Francis Drake set fire to the church in 1586, a hurricane again destroyed it in 1599, and the British set fire to it once again in 1702.

The chapel had served as the hub of a colony that had been formed 55 years before the Pilgrims ever stepped foot on Plymouth Rock, but that final visit may have been for good.

While the archaeologists are planning on moving the bones found outside the wine shop to a nearby cemetery, the skeletons found inside will stay right where they have lain for the past 400 years.

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