The Buskam (German pronunciation: [ˈbʊs.kam], locally [ˈbʊːskɒm]), also Buhskam or Buskamen is a large glacial erratic boulder, 325 metres off the coast of Göhren, Rügen, northern Germany.
[1] Erratics (German: Findlinge) have been scattered all over northern Germany by the glaciers of the Ice Age, but are usually much smaller.
It is also conceivable that the syllable bus- stands for ‘atonement’ in a Christian sense.
However, it is possible that the syllable comes from the Middle Low German buhsen, which would mean ‘swell, rush’ and would describe the location of the stone off the coast.
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