It belongs to the Baalberg culture
Intel is going to build a new plant in Germany. It turned out that at the site where this factory will be built, there are archaeological finds thousands of years old.
Archaeologists last year discovered burial chambers at a site near Magdeburg, where there would be a factory in the future. Presumably they belong to the Baalberg culture, which dominated central Germany and Bohemia from 4100 to 3600 BC. That is, the objects can be 5000-6000 years old.
During the Baalberg culture in the Middle Neolithic period, two large trapezoidal wooden burial chambers, 20 and 30 meters long, were built just 200 meters apart. Both were undoubtedly covered with a large amount of earth; burial mounds probably dominated the landscape. The corridor between them was probably a processional route about a thousand years later, during the Globular Amphora culture period (3300–2800 BC)
Archaeologists say that their work will be completed in April of this year, and there is no talk of any delays in the construction of the factory.