Pikne Kama: My PhD project is analysing Estonian runic songs and place-related lore containing information about burials in watery places and combines them with archaeological material. Use of these three different sources together should give us more complete picture about burials customs of the historical times or even older periods. Based on studying burial related runic songs I have made an interpretation that in the past there have also been watery burial sites (mostly bogs). The place-related oral history also describes that some swamps have been used as burial places or bones have been found in watery places. Oral history raises an intriguing question: do we have archaeological finds supporting these folkloristic sources and is it possible to find new archaeological data about this kind of burials? Only one bog body has been found in Estonia: in 1936 a bog body from Rabivere was unearthed. The body of a woman seems to be buried into peat at the end of 16th century or at the beginning of 17th century. Unfortunately this body was reburied after examination, but folklore gives new ways how to interpret this find. I try to analyse also other archaeological finds what gives better understanding about the human relationship with watery places in past. Besides that I am doing fieldwork in watery places as a part of my PhD project, examine some place-lore objects and testing different methods (mostly making test pits and taking soil samples) to find new archaeological evidence.