Stonehenge’s ‘altar stone’ not originally from Wales: Western Australian -led research
New research led by Western Australia’s Curtin University has revealed Stonehenge’s monumental six-tonne Altar Stone, long believed to originate from Wales, actually hails from Scotland.
The findings point to unexpectedly advanced transport methods and social organisation at the time of the stone’s arrival at its current location in southern England, about 5000 years ago.
Curtin researchers studied mineral grains within fragments of the sandstone block, which measures five by one metres and is 50 centimetres thick, at the centre of Stonehenge’s stone circle in Wiltshire.
Lead author, PhD student Anthony Clarke from Curtin’s School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, said analysis matched these with rocks from northeast Scotland, and clearly differentiated them from Welsh bedrock.
We forget sometimes that the builders of ancient structures were also anatomically modern humans, every bit as clever and complex as us. We should be surprised if there weren't the kind of transport methods and trade networks to support this.
The rock formation identified is at the surface throughout the Orkney Islands.
The River Avon seems to be at least close to navigable by a barge carrying a 5m long stone, requiring less than a mile of transport across land to Stonehenge.
So it doesn't seem to require extremely implausible means to get it there.
As to why -- perhaps the Stonehenge civilization came from Orkney originally, bringing their sacred stone with them? Or perhaps Orkney was a sort of Rivendell back then -- it's easier to defend as an isolated island group. You might go get a big stone from the monks there to establish the authenticity of your satellite colony.
The ring of Brodgar is in the area where this stone came from. There is also evidence of stone circles underwater near to it from before sea levels rose at the end of the last ice age. If your religious sites were getting inundated I imagine you'd try to move the most important part of them as far away from the area as possible and to higher suitable ground. So Stonehenge may exist as a consequence of ancient climate change :). The river Avon at Amesbury had population centres in Neolithic times. The Old Sarum hill fort near Salisbury for example.
The waters down the west coast can be a little hairy. I asked Claude to analyze the paper and speculate a route and it thought the east coast route, then up the Thames and down the Avon was more likely?
"Modern oceanographic knowledge tells us that the Irish Sea can be challenging due to strong currents, frequent storms, and numerous shoals and sandbanks. These conditions were likely present in Neolithic times as well." (Claude)
Mind you, so did every other HN commentator and it's something that rarely comes up when forums speculate on the transport of stones in the UK for ancient monuments.
It's easier to stack up the "weird non local" stones dropped at the end of a valley after a glacial retreat than it is to transit them ~1,000 km without a crane and a truck.
That certainly is a sequence of words consistent with the rules of English grammar. Can you explain what you think it contributes to the conversation? Are you suggesting it’s more likely to be semantically valid than other such sequences of words?
Yea, ancients had a certain taste for decorations.
For example in Assyria, to get an audience with their king Ashurbanipal, I believe, one had to go through a corridor full of heads of king's defeated enemies.
We often forget how violent past was. It was extremely hard to live to adulthood without killing anyone.
Although humans from this period are anatomically the same as us, their culture isn't much like ours and the things you're talking about are a matter of culture.
5000 years is a long time for adaptational/behavioral selection in the comparatively - compare to other large mammals - dense society. During the well observable last couple centuries we see significant changes in the average human height, aggressiveness and testosterone production, socials skills, even IQ level noticeably drifts over just few generations being the subject of economical and societal mass-selection process. You can't just dismiss the selective effect of mass culling events like wars, revolutions, Inquisition and similar societal level massive behavioral-based selection processes adjusting the society for specific traits (for example Russian revolution killed several millions most educated people, and later Stalin "adjusted" the society by killing several millions of people who tended to be less-conformists), executing over the centuries or later putting in prison significant number of people with specific social/behavioral traits, etc.
I see people strongly disagree. I wonder how those people would explain how similar selection actions produce such strong changes in just a few generations of say dogs or cows.
In Orkney (north east Scotland) they have the sanding stones of Stennes. Not nearly as impressive as Stonehenge but also not surprising there’s some connection.
As a bit of a fan of Orkney (a family connection), I will point out that there are many attractions for archaeologists in Orkney. Some sites are dating before Stonehenge circle or at least similar timeframes, I wonder if the central Scottish stone at Stonehenge is an attempt to transfer the magic from Orkney (a biased view INAA)
We have the Standing Stones of Stenness (as mentioned), the Ring of Brodgar, the chambered cairn at Maeshowe, the Barnhouse Settlement and the Ring of Bookan. Also we have The Neolithic village at Skara Brae (The site was occupied from roughly 3180 BC to about 2500 BC and is Europe's most complete Neolithic village).
The archaeological dig at the Ness of Brodgar is closing soon after 20 years of work, to preserve the rest for future archaeologists. I think we have enough samples to keep the researchers happy for a long time.
If going then pack warm clothes as Orkney is very windy and frequently wet. To paraphrase Billy Connolly “Orkney is definitely windswept and interesting”
Further discussion:
Stonehenge’s ‘altar stone’ not originally from Wales: Western Australian -led research
~ https://www.watoday.com.au/national/western-australia/stoneh...Nature journal video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HerAs9RRA34
We forget sometimes that the builders of ancient structures were also anatomically modern humans, every bit as clever and complex as us. We should be surprised if there weren't the kind of transport methods and trade networks to support this.
The rock formation identified is at the surface throughout the Orkney Islands. The River Avon seems to be at least close to navigable by a barge carrying a 5m long stone, requiring less than a mile of transport across land to Stonehenge. So it doesn't seem to require extremely implausible means to get it there. As to why -- perhaps the Stonehenge civilization came from Orkney originally, bringing their sacred stone with them? Or perhaps Orkney was a sort of Rivendell back then -- it's easier to defend as an isolated island group. You might go get a big stone from the monks there to establish the authenticity of your satellite colony.
The ring of Brodgar is in the area where this stone came from. There is also evidence of stone circles underwater near to it from before sea levels rose at the end of the last ice age. If your religious sites were getting inundated I imagine you'd try to move the most important part of them as far away from the area as possible and to higher suitable ground. So Stonehenge may exist as a consequence of ancient climate change :). The river Avon at Amesbury had population centres in Neolithic times. The Old Sarum hill fort near Salisbury for example.
I wonder what the Avon looked like back then?
The waters down the west coast can be a little hairy. I asked Claude to analyze the paper and speculate a route and it thought the east coast route, then up the Thames and down the Avon was more likely?
"Modern oceanographic knowledge tells us that the Irish Sea can be challenging due to strong currents, frequent storms, and numerous shoals and sandbanks. These conditions were likely present in Neolithic times as well." (Claude)
> I asked Claude to analyze the paper and speculate a route and it
utterly failed to mention glacial erratics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glacial_erratic
https://www.cyark.org/projects/okotoks-erratic/overview
Mind you, so did every other HN commentator and it's something that rarely comes up when forums speculate on the transport of stones in the UK for ancient monuments.
It's easier to stack up the "weird non local" stones dropped at the end of a valley after a glacial retreat than it is to transit them ~1,000 km without a crane and a truck.
> (Claude)
That certainly is a sequence of words consistent with the rules of English grammar. Can you explain what you think it contributes to the conversation? Are you suggesting it’s more likely to be semantically valid than other such sequences of words?
Interesting thanks :)
I'm not surprised that they could, I'm more surprised that they wanted to.
What else was there to do? There was no Internet, no television, no football (perhaps), no books, no broadcast radio.
I'm only half joking.
Maybe someone was "visiting" Scotland, and decided that it would look good in their backyard
Yea, ancients had a certain taste for decorations.
For example in Assyria, to get an audience with their king Ashurbanipal, I believe, one had to go through a corridor full of heads of king's defeated enemies.
We often forget how violent past was. It was extremely hard to live to adulthood without killing anyone.
See also: Stone of Scone.
Fascinating but also a lot more portable
Although humans from this period are anatomically the same as us, their culture isn't much like ours and the things you're talking about are a matter of culture.
The specifics are a matter of culture, but every civilization has transportation and trade. That's universal.
>every bit as clever and complex as us
5000 years is a long time for adaptational/behavioral selection in the comparatively - compare to other large mammals - dense society. During the well observable last couple centuries we see significant changes in the average human height, aggressiveness and testosterone production, socials skills, even IQ level noticeably drifts over just few generations being the subject of economical and societal mass-selection process. You can't just dismiss the selective effect of mass culling events like wars, revolutions, Inquisition and similar societal level massive behavioral-based selection processes adjusting the society for specific traits (for example Russian revolution killed several millions most educated people, and later Stalin "adjusted" the society by killing several millions of people who tended to be less-conformists), executing over the centuries or later putting in prison significant number of people with specific social/behavioral traits, etc.
I see people strongly disagree. I wonder how those people would explain how similar selection actions produce such strong changes in just a few generations of say dogs or cows.
In Orkney (north east Scotland) they have the sanding stones of Stennes. Not nearly as impressive as Stonehenge but also not surprising there’s some connection.
As a bit of a fan of Orkney (a family connection), I will point out that there are many attractions for archaeologists in Orkney. Some sites are dating before Stonehenge circle or at least similar timeframes, I wonder if the central Scottish stone at Stonehenge is an attempt to transfer the magic from Orkney (a biased view INAA)
We have the Standing Stones of Stenness (as mentioned), the Ring of Brodgar, the chambered cairn at Maeshowe, the Barnhouse Settlement and the Ring of Bookan. Also we have The Neolithic village at Skara Brae (The site was occupied from roughly 3180 BC to about 2500 BC and is Europe's most complete Neolithic village).
The archaeological dig at the Ness of Brodgar is closing soon after 20 years of work, to preserve the rest for future archaeologists. I think we have enough samples to keep the researchers happy for a long time.
If going then pack warm clothes as Orkney is very windy and frequently wet. To paraphrase Billy Connolly “Orkney is definitely windswept and interesting”