Since the grave was found inside a burial mound, electric sensitivity must have been used to determine the subsurface sediments and objects before excavating. Due to collapse from erosion, its excavation was necessary, and thus a combination of both vertical and horizontal excavations was applicable. The vertical excavation was to identify and remove strata by paying keen attention to soil color and texture. The horizontal excavation was to expose objects lying right below the mound and the grave.
This was to leave the original finding as it was – as a primary source. This helps in determining what the body reveals about the dead individual. It also helps with later reconstruction.
Reconstructions enable us to better understand our distant past and thus provide a glimpse of our history. Through the researcher, it helps the observer perceive the uncertainties and problems involved in a particular excavation. More importantly, reconstructions are advantageous in enabling us experience and relive our past lifetime, particularly through the life-sized models. On the downside, reconstructions are never 100% factual. Every archeological reconstruction is usually wrong; it is only a matter of how wrong it is.
The tomb shows us that the body was of royalty, and hence the princely tomb. The grave was filled with stunning goods such as gorgeous pottery and gold-stripped shoes. The body also was adorned in gold neck ring, gold brooches, and clothing made from Chinese silk. The 3.3 feet bronze cauldron is an indication of trades with the Greeks or Etruscans. This also evidences ancient trading routes with their nearby cities and states such as Massilia, which is the modern Marseille, France.
The presence of six constructed ditches (Feuerschlitze) within the burial mound shows a habit of mass beer production by the people at the time. The ditches were carefully constructed and had a U-shaped profile. The people believed in an afterlife, which is showed by the careful preservation of the body and the presence of a wagon and a couch, perhaps to enable the chieftain to feel like home.