Scientists Solve Mystery of the Origin of Stonehenge Megaliths (npr.org) 104
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: Researchers have announced that they have solved a centuries-long mystery surrounding the origin of most of the large stones that make up the outer ring of Stonehenge, in an article published to the journal Science Advances on Wednesday. Using geochemical data, researchers have determined that 50 of the 52 large stones, sarsen megaliths, originated from the West Woods in Wiltshire, England, some 15 miles from where the prehistoric monument stands. The smaller stones near the center of the structure, called bluestones, had previously been traced to Wales, nearly 125 miles away. Researchers still don't know exactly how the 30-ton stones were transported. "How they were moved to the site is still really the subject of speculation," David Nash, University of Brighton geomorphologist and lead researcher on the study, told Reuters.
"Given the size of the stones, they must have either been dragged or moved on rollers to Stonehenge. We don't know the exact route but at least we now have a starting point and an endpoint."
"Given the size of the stones, they must have either been dragged or moved on rollers to Stonehenge. We don't know the exact route but at least we now have a starting point and an endpoint."
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It would be fascinating to know how they managed to line them up. Maybe trial and error, but some other ancient civilizations were able to calculate calendars very accurately. The Mayans had timing accurate to better than 12 seconds/day, despite not having any optics or advanced measuring tools.
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hay do any of you know that the sun rises up over there all the time and sets over there all the time.
obvious that it was slow that day
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most interesting is that a bunch folks sat around a camp fire and considered the question. hay do any of you know that the sun rises up over there all the time and sets over there all the time. obvious that it was slow that day
Not so surprising. You don't have to go very far back in history at all to get to a time before electric lights and endless forms of entertainment when all the things the freshmen in my intro astronomy class struggle to wrap their heads around were second nature. For half the day, every day, the only thing to see out there was a view of the skies which amateur astronomers now have to plan vacations around. Plus, those things the lights up there did (every day, month and year of your whole life) were pret
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TL;DR - the amazing thing isn't that pre-electricity people knew what the skies did, it's that today's people have so little clue.
Is it though? You said yourself, pre-electricity people were substantially tied to seasonal changes in everything they did, with very little control over their environments. A post-electricity civilization isn't totally independent of its environment, since planting and harvesting still has to happen at appropriate times, but day to day living is very nearly completely independent. It makes a great deal of sense that today's people don't pay much attention to astronomy anymore, other than as a hobby. Hu
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Sun god, Son of God, close enough!
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sat around a camp fire
Sat around a fireplace. These were urbanites in a walled neighborhood.
Re:Stonehenge (Score:5, Funny)
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OK, now do the wooden megahenge nearby, I want to learn about that one!
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I actually got to see them in concert.
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I saw some public TV program on Stonehenge that suggested the site had a naturally occurring geographical feature that happened to line up with the solstices. The people noticed that, and built the rest around it. They also traced the origin of various animals (from their teeth) found in midden piles from the time Stonehenge was built, and it indicated that the animals lived in areas all over the UK, and as far North as Scotland. The suggestion was that folks came from all over to build it.
So, basically, ne
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This is why you should stop thinking that there exist commercial television programs that want to teach you something.
They lie to you the whole time while saying, "maybe," even where their maybes are entirely and easily refuted. The fact is that nothing is certain; they abuse the inherent lack of certainty in life to blow smoke up your ass.
Now learn about the other henges in the area, and if the other henges also have broad avenues that line up with the solstices. (they do) Then find out if any of the bette
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I had a look for it, and I think it was a NOVA episode called "Secrets of Stonehenge". But for what it's worth, I also found another reference to it on Wikipedia:
Radar mapping also reveals that three chalk ridges in the Stonehenge area are aligned by geological accident on the midsummer sunrise/midwinter axis. This natural solstitial alignment would have symbolized cosmic unity to the ancients, a place where Heaven and Earth were unified by some supernatural force. This seems to have set the blueprint for solstitial alignments in Stonehenge and the timber circles at Durrington Walls and Woodhenge as well
Most of what we know about that period is rampant guesswork and handwaving. Doesn't make it any less interesting. But I'm going to go to my grave believing that neolithic peoples traveled from all over the island to have a sick rave because that's pretty awesome.
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There are numerous sites from that period that provide the necessary context. That is the alignment they would have used at any site.
That is most likely a graveyard site. The rave would have been on the other side of the hill, inside the wooden megahenge. That is the land of the living.
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Re: Stonehenge (Score:3)
My suggestion is to go to the two key documentaries that make up Operation: Stonehenge, a part of the Hidden Landscapes Project.
They explain the order of most of the structures and the likely origins.
They also point out there was a line of wooden posts at Stonehenge 6,000 years earlier, so the site was sacred before the monument.
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They lined them up approximately, probably eyeballed by the local religious official. Things are lined up closely enough to the same way around the region from that period that it is obvious they were aligning it that way, but they don't appear to have cared about exact precision. The contextually implied precision is that of a human standing in that place. The Mayans were using it differently, in much later era with more advanced mathematics.
These people constructed wide avenues lined up with the equinoxes
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Astronomical alignments do not require any mathematics, only observation. Math can be convenient, but it is not necessary.
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I get all sorts of positive energy when I meditate between the stones.
Is that 'energy' coming from the security guard's batons as they drag you back behind the rope barrier?
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That claim would work a lot better if you got the name of the honour right.
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It's good the way it is, though. You don't want to claim a real-world honor falsely. But a fake honor that sounds like a real-world honor? Fair game.
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The Druids themselves said they were already there, and already ancient.
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Today's "Druids" are an invention of a bunch of 19th century fops looking for an excuse for drunken revelry. They had no actual link to the original Druids and in fact almost nothing is known of their actual religion or ceremonies except for some dubious Roman propaganda. Considering that there have been numerous complete changes in material culture, religious building and iconography, lifestyles, and a couple of complete turnovers of population between the time of the construction of Stonehenge and the R
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Quite so. I have a 600 page book about the Celts that lists everything, repeat everything known about the Druids. The exhaustive compilation is half a page long.
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Re:Stonehenge (Score:5, Interesting)
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Solved? (Score:1)
"Researchers still don't know exactly how the 30-ton stones were transported."
And this fits the definition of "solved" how?
Re:Solved? (Score:5, Funny)
Let's see if this helps:
https://www.dictionary.com/bro... [dictionary.com]
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Fair enough
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Scientists Solve Mystery of the Origin of Stonehenge Megaliths
They know where they came from, not how they got where they are now.
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'cos they know where they came from. The "Mystery of the Origin" was solved - just as it says in the headline (you don't even need to rtfa) - just not the haulage company they used.
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The solved the mystery of the ORIGIN, not transportation method.
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My bad - still need to wake up and read clearly.
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Typical /.
One silly mistake generates more replies than anything else.
Mod +1 for fessing up!
Obligatory (Score:2)
"Researchers still don't know exactly how the 30-ton stones were transported."
I'm not saying it was aliens.....
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Coincidentally, there was a recent discovery of rope-twisters from about 40kyr ago ... but I can't find the damned reference. Fsck it!.
OK, found it - Grauniad article [theguardian.com]. A somewhat older article [sciencedaily.com].
Long story short : rope was a really important - and old - technology, but it doesn't preserve well. A related, and similarly poorly preserved, technology is that of stitching and tailoring cloting - which was probably rather important in the spread of hum
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It is highly likely built by aliens, as the builders were horticulturists and the native population were hunter-gatherers.
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An annoying aspect to how people generally, and popular news/entertainment in particular responds to the statement "we don't know they moved the giant stones tens or hundreds of miles" is to imagine that it means "there is no way we know of that ancient people could have moved these stones, it's like MAGIC!".
The truth is SEVERAL ways are known by which it could have been done, we just don't know from actual physical evidence which one they used.
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"Researchers still don't know exactly how the 30-ton stones were transported."
Well, looking at a map, the River Avon runs near both of these spots. That would be my first suspect.
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Care to do some back-of-the-thumbnail calculations on how large a raft you'd need to make (of wood, density 500-700 kg/m^3) to support a 30 ton megalith, then compare it with the depth of the river Avon.
Then ... how are you going to move it? Polers poling from on top of the raft/ megalith construction? Add their weight into the calculation. People pulling from the river bank - except where the bank is boggy.
To quote my geography
Interesting... (Score:2)
I skimmed the paper this references. The analysis is valid.
I'm just wondering if there is an identifiable quarry site for either of the two sources?
That would be very interesting to visit.
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One interesting idea (novel to me on considering your question, but unlikely to be unique) is that the probable origin of the British megalithic culture in Orkney had it's largest stone circle made of stones from each part of the island, presumably hauled to the central site by people
Two stones remain unexplained? (Score:2)
I'm not saying they were extra-terrestrial in origin, but...
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Get a haircut, hippie!
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Correct, rock is almost entirely extra-terrestrial, in fact it is molecularity pre-Solar. It appears localized almost entirely due to localized patterns of plastic deformation, but some of these rocks might have erupted from many worlds, under many stars.
Laziness? (Score:2)
So, the center stones were imported from 125 miles away. After going to all that trouble with shipping, they said "Screw it, we'll buy locally-sourced stones"
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Re:Laziness? (Score:4, Interesting)
I can't remember the source now, but it's claimed that the bluestones were likely looted from an earlier religious site considerably closer to their point of origin. There are apparently two sets of weather-caused patinas on them, indicating that they were in one place for a long time before being moved to their current location and weathering some more. I suppose it would be the ancient equivalent of the Spanish building churches on the ruins of Inca and Aztec temples.
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More like the Spanish building churches using stone looted from demolished Mayan (etc) constructions.
As we were having a walk today, the wife noticed a sign saying "site of Castle X" and asked "Where is the castle?" We were just beside a gate which used stonking great lintel stones as gateposts (presumably from the castle) in a drystone wall including numerous squared-off blocks of stone (also likely looted from the castle).
As soon as a
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Yes, and no. The Inca and Aztec temples hadn't so much "fallen out of use" as they were deliberately demolished by the Spanish barbarians and many of the stones were used to construct the churches. The profanation of sacred ground has always been a basic Catholic missionary tactic. "Prove" to the locals that your deity is more powerful than theirs by destroying their holy place and constructing your own in its place.
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The Babylonians learned that trick from the Assyrians (along with some interesting ways of peeling people) before the Romans were a glint in an Etruscan potter's eye. Very much SOP.
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Here's my question: okay, so they're a match to some location waaaay over yonder. But have closer possible sources been *eliminated*? that is, are they sure there are no closer sources? Given that any rock from the same geological event should have the same chemical signatures, and lava flows can cover hundreds of square miles, seems to me this is possible -- maybe we just haven't found the quarry yet.
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Given that, I think you'd need to take cores every mile or so, and assume that the sources may now be under 10+ feet of dirt, to be really conclusive. But good point that anyone capable of building this in the first place was probably equally capable of using oxen and rafts and rollers, and of finding a more-convenient water route, and given that labor was cheap, may not have thought 125 miles was all that daunting. We need to remember that until a mere hundred years ago or so, every human structure, no mat
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No Roman mention of it TTBOMK. Which is slightly surprising, since in their utilitarian way, they did pay considerable attention to the beliefs of subdued people - cultural control being cheaper and surer than encamped armies.
I think you're misunderstanding the significance of the core specimen. It's not about the sediment surrounding or overlaying the sarsen - t
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The doleritic tuffs are volcanic rocks, but ashfall rather than lava, and are over 400 million years old. The sarsens are relict sandstones (calcite cemented) formed by the dissolution and r
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Thanks, that's exactly what I was wondering about.
A couple tons is not so much for a gang of men or a team of oxen, even if they're dragging it. A teacher of my acquaintance demo'd that to her 8th graders by hitching them up to a 1 ton construction weight -- they had no trouble pulling it across wet grass.
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I mentioned Orkney several times, and one interesting snippet from a program filmed there (with a ton-ish specimen) was the effectiveness of wet seaweed as a lubricant for the stone - on a skid.
Obviously of more limited use in the Stonehenge case, but around the Severn crossing - however they did it - potentially relevant.
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And mud, especially clay, can be so slippery that the durn thing is likely to get away from you. Aforementioned teacher (being expert in ancient history) likes to point out that Nile River mud is so slick that you almost can't stand up on it, and made a perfect lubricant for moving large stone blocks.
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That's what the gang with buckets of water is for.
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... or they were trying to complete the works before some arbitrary deadline...
Bad management practices of the prehistoric.
My theory (Score:1)
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Maybe the Vikings weren't the first to prefer unending rain to eight months of winter . . .
Moving on Rollers (Score:2)
During lockdown, I decided to clean up a pile of building rubble behind my house, which included a number of concrete slabs: I'd say around 3-4 feet by 2 or so feet by 8-10 inches thick. They'd originally been cast in the ground, so only the top side was close to flat, the other sides were more rough. Just a bit too hea
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During lockdown, I decided to clean up a pile of building rubble behind my house, which included a number of concrete slabs: I'd say around 3-4 feet by 2 or so feet by 8-10 inches thick. They'd originally been cast in the ground, so only the top side was close to flat, the other sides were more rough. Just a bit too heavy for me to pick up to stand on edge, let alone move (and due to lockdown I had to do it alone, couldn't get outside help). I had some pieces of wooden pole (around 2 inches in diameter) lying around, so I decided to try the roller method as depicted on all sorts of stone-age/Pyramid/Stonehenge representations. And I had a (modern-day) 7-foot metal bar that was convenient to use as a lever.
I eventually got all the slab pieces moved to where I wanted them (some 25 feet away) - often by inching them along with the help of the lever bar on the loose soil more than rolling them. In short, with a lot more energy, time and swearing than I budgeted for. The nice pictures makes one believe it makes things a lot easier than it is in reality.
Rolling works, but you need teams of people pulling/pushing to make sure the force is even, plus other people whose job it is to pick up/lay down the rollers.
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The technique is in common use on construction sites to this day [duckduckgo.com].
You'll remember for the next time? Or you'll ensure that there isn't a next time? I'd have drilled or chiselled a hole into the slabs, then made a "feather and wedge [duckduckgo.com]" from anything suitable I
How they moved the blue stones? (Score:2)
Wheels, cylinders or runners moved by manpower with the help of harness animals. Next question?
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Stonehenge dates to well before harnessing of draft animals had arrived in western Europe.
You'd be surprised what a team of motivated people can do with nothing more than sticks and rope. On Easter Island the team working with Thor Heyerdahl found that 40-some people hauling on ropes were sufficient to pull a 13 foot tall moai statue on level ground, and rather rapidly at that once they got the thing moving. It took less than a dozen people just a couple of days with wooden levers and piles of rock to sta
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We may have the advantage on the ancients in the use of technology, but their project management skills put ours to shame.
It's amazing what religion can do for you. Astronomical megaliths and a two for one special on atrocities. Thanks, but I'll take modern day project management. A pointy haired boss is easier to deal with than a pointy stick priest.
Modern project management is pretty capable too. The Apollo project coordinated the efforts of upwards of 400,000 people and accomplished a task that the small-minded among us still believe is impossible, a task the builders of Stonehenge might have dreamed about in idle momen
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It's a different set of talents when you have things like writing, spreadsheets and telephones at your disposal. The Inca, Egyptians, pre-literate Chinese and Indonesians all sculpted entire valleys with work crews of up to 100,000 people, providing food, shelter and clothing for them during the project (generally carried out during non-productive agricultural periods such as the Nile flood or the Andean winter). Imagine managing the 20,000 people building Sacsayhuaman with just quipus, runners and a clay
15 miles (Score:2)
15 miles is a huge distance to drag something that big ...back then at least a few days journey .. wonder what motivated then to move it to that spot. Same thing with the pyramids in Egypt, why didn't they build the pyramids right in Tura where the quarry was instead of a ten kilometers away in Giza.
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The problem is that history is pretty much a joke subject, it pretends to be scientific but it's more akin to writing fiction half the time.
It wasn't long ago that we were told the stones had been geologically linked to a site in Wales 125 miles away and that was the solution to the mystery. Now we're told it's definitely 15 miles away, except two of the stones, which just happen to be from somewhere else, they just don't know where.
It's not just Stonehenge of course, they've definitely proven how the likes
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The smaller bluestones are from Wales. The article is about the larger sarcens. Both have been definitively proved by crystal and mineral analysis.
And outcroppings of solid rocks don't "erode away into lack of obviousness" in only 5,000 years.
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"Magnificent journey" my ass. 15 miles is not far, the Egyptians around the same time were bringing stones from as much as 500 miles away, some of them larger than the sarcens. And that whole area is flat. The Inca transported rocks three times that size down one mountain, across a Class 5 rapids, several miles up a river valley, and then a couple hundred feet up another mountainside to build Ollantaytambo. Their tools? Rocks, ropes, levers and ramps.
I really don't understand your objections, they alre
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That area is pretty flat, you can easily walk 20 miles in a day there. At Ollantaytambo the Spanish observed the Inca moving rocks three times that size down a mountainside, across a Class 5 rapids, several kilometers up a river valley and then a couple hundred meters more up another mountain to construct a temple. Their tools were rocks, levers, ropes, and several hundred people. (Then European diseases killed off 90% of their population and it all stopped.) People today really don't appreciate what an
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Oh, I forgot to mention that you also need a couple of teams with levers in the front to keep the stone from digging into the ground. Once it starts moving momentum helps a lot.
African (Score:2)
Swallows.
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What were the original metrics there 5000 years ago anyway?
(sigh) (Score:1)
I remember reading that very same headline at least a dozen times in the last 40 years.
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Some links, then?
how is this news? (Score:2)
Iirc there was an article in archaeology magazine about this like a year ago.
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Link?
Being wise, (Score:2)