 Archaeologists have excavated a wooden road in the town of Jarosław in Poland. The discovery was made during works on the present-day road surface and sewage connections, revealing a 30-metre-long wooden road in the town centre that would probably have connected the city gate leading towards Kraków. Archaeologists Katarzyna Olezsik told Science in Poland that so far we have managed to unveil a wooden road with a length of 30 metres. However, we know that this road was certainly longer by at least another several dozen metres because we encountered several more fragments. The road represents one of the longest wooden routes ever discovered in Poland and is approximately 3 metres in width. And this means that it was probably a one-way system for carriages passing through the town. The road consisted of a load-bearing structure in the form of three wooden joists arranged transversely to the beams that were connected with pegs. And one of the archaeologists that made the discovery added that there are no traces of hooves on the road or the carriages' grooves that ran along it, which means that the wood used for its construction, probably oak, was very durable. Additionally, and as the research shows, traces of repairs are visible in several places, which proves that there was regular roadworks. After removing parts of the road for preservation, archaeologists also uncovered an earlier hardened road beneath that dates from around the 14th century. But what do you guys think of these wooden roads in Poland?