Grevenbroekmuseum vzw
Big Bang
With a "big bang" the fascinating tale of the universe, and later of life itself, started off.
In the museum this story is told, beginning with the the birth of our planet.
Further in this room, you can see a large topographical map of Hamont-Achel. Throughout history, people that lived there had to take account of the local topography. Some chose the higher territories, while others preferred the lower grounds, like the surroundings of fens or brooks. As an introduction to the historical outline, the evolution of life is depicted. Fossils from several periods amplify this story. The ascent and the evolution of man are illustrated by means of (plaster-casts of) skulls, primitive tools and drawings
PALEOLITHICUM
MESOLITHICUM
(Meso = middle; Lithos = stone)
When the severe ice ages finally came to an end, man hunted small game. Everything that he needed, he took from nature: plants, wood and bone, stone for implements and for weapons, and skins to make clothes.
We have a review of the hunters who roamed through this region after the last ice age. This period was called the Mesolithic. The climate changed and migration of wildlive and plants followed. That these people lived on a varied diet can be deduced from the variety of tools that have been recovered. Fishing was done by means of traps, eel-spears and hooks. Spear, bow and arrow were used to hunt water-fowl.
NEOLITHICUM
(Neo = new; Lithos = stone)
After roaming through nature for thousands of years, man had acquired a wealth of knowledge. Then, a new step forward was taken by man in the Middle East about 12,000 years ago:
man became a farmer. It was not necessary for him anymore to hunt and follow wild animals and he settled near his fields, his crops and his livestock. This new life-style entailed new inventions like: ceramics, agricultural implements, weaving, the wheel...
The museum covers the epoch during which man realizes a revolutionary breakthrough, namely the introduction of agriculture. This period is called the Neolithic, a timespan in which stone is still being used as raw material for the manufacture of implements. You can see polished axes, winged arrow-heads, spears, the earliest pottery, and agricultural tools like the sickle and a grinding stone.
METAL AGE
The introduction of bronze was followed by that of iron, which is widely available. This led to concentrations of military power, to conquests and to the migration of tribes like these of the Celts.
Burial mounds can also be found in great numbers during the Iron Age. A great variety of urns is exhibited, and also a pair of bone skates. Also cremation remnants (pieces of bone) can be seen. When the Teutons moved in, in these (by that time) Romanized regions during the fifth century after Christ, they also brought their specific kind of pottery. This proof of the migration of the Germanic peoples is found in this town, and is also on exhibit.