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Stonehenge—A New Understanding: Solving the Mysteries of the Greatest Stone Age Monument

Page 45

by Mike Parker Pearson


  full plan of, 80, 89, 256

  laying-out of, 256, 334, 336, 343

  milk pots deposited at, 126

  not roofed, 89

  partial excavation of, 79

  pottery from, 115, 117

  radiocarbon dating of, 89, 90, 110

  rebuilt more than once, 91

  second entrance found at, 89

  similarity of, to Stonehenge, 89, 338

  solsticial orientation and use of, 79, 89, 91, 342

  timbers used in phases of, differences between, 125

  units of measurement used in construction of, 257

  well-preserved, 82

  years-old questions concerning, 89

  Spiritualism, 177

  Station Stones, 28, 47, 49, 107, 108, 252, 254, 258, 293, 310

  Stanton Drew, 274

  Stenness, Stones of, 324

  Stone, J. F. S. (“Jack”), 38, 140, 141, 145, 158, 261

  at Millmead, 158, 159

  at Woodlands, 159

  stone circles

  at Avebury, 11, 59, 60, 294

  at Calanais, 325, 353

  and druid worship, 179

  explosion in construction of, 323

  lost, 229, 262

  on Mount Killaurus, 279

  in Orkney, 323

  at Preseli, 277, 283, 288

  Ring of Brodgar, 323, 324

  at Stanton Drew, 274

  at Stenness, 324

  at West Amesbury, 23

  see also Bluestonehenge; Stonehenge

  Stone of Destiny, 274

  Stone of Scone, 273

  stone tools, 4, 4n, 15, 58, 63, 134, 154, 233, 246, 280

  from Preseli, 271

  see also arrowheads, axes

  Stonehenge

  archaeologists’ various interpretations of, 13

  astronomical factors concerning, 44, 45, 47, 173, 245, 331; see also Stonehenge: and solstices

  and A 303 trunk road, 156, 227, 231

  “back-stage” facilities at, 108

  BBC Timewatch program on dating of, 303, 306

  belief in healing powers of, 280, 281, 282, 304

  bluestones at, see main entry

  brief history of, 27

  Bronze Age field systems encroach on, 238

  cart tracks between Amesbury and, 313

  center of wealth and power shifts from, 352

  changes to, by 2000 BC, 346

  chronology, see Stonehenge’s new sequence

  cremation burials at, see cremation burials

  Darvill and Wainwright’s work at, 166, 303

  Darwin’s earthworm work at, 34, 305

  dating of, see Stonehenge: radiocarbon dating; Stonehenge’s new sequence

  decline of, gradual process, 350

  decline of, socioeconomic forces lead to, 341

  decline of, understanding, 344

  ditch and bank at, dating of, 7, 43

  and druids, see main entry

  and Durrington Walls, Avon provides link between, 7, 10, 14, 50, 55

  Durrington Walls contrasted with, in terms of burials, 197

  Durrington Walls as settlement of builders of, discussed, 109

  Durrington Walls not separate from, 3

  earliest farmers in area of, few traces of, 23

  excavations at, during Riverside Project, 3

  field west of, see Stonehenge Palisade

  first appearance of, in written records, 353

  Flagstones compared to, 317

  frequent rearrangement of stones at, 43

  Geoffrey of Monmouth’s view of, 278

  given to nation, 36

  and Giza pyramids, 333

  ground-surface contours of, 28

  Henry of Huntingdon’s description of, 353

  in Historia Anglorum, 353

  house under South Barrow at, 107

  and human remains, see human remains

  imminent further excavation unlikely at, 354

  “incense burner” found at, 205, 207, 318

  inspired by British fashions for monuments and houses, 342

  “King” of, 209

  landscape around, 133, 314

  last burial at, in 3rd millennium BC, 195

  last great stone monument of megalithic age, 331

  laying-out of, using simple means, 255

  Llandegai compared to, 316

  location of, reason for, 7, 233, 244

  map showing location of, 24

  mass tourism reaches, 181

  Mesolithic posts under parking lot at, 135, 136

  million visitors a year attracted to, 172

  Minoan and Mycenaean influences on, refuted claim for, 332

  name of, acquired, 313

  and Neolithic labor organization, 115

  and New Age Travelers, 45

  new sequence for, see Stonehenge’s new sequence

  1977 festival site accidentally excavated near, 198, 264

  not technically a henge, 4

  number of people buried at, estimation of, 203

  oldest suspected cow bone found at, 23

  organizations responsible for, 50

  Orkney’s version of, 99

  and Pagans, see main entry

  Palisade at, see Stonehenge Palisade

  parking lot at, Mesolithic posts under, 135, 136

  paucity of investigation into, 15

  phases of construction, see Stonehenge’s new sequence

  plans of, 28, 44, 47, 168

  postholes at, 30, 41n, 44, 49, 90, 91, 107, 135, 137, 168, 170, 182, 192, 234, 236, 238, 245, 247, 307, 309, 346

  power of myth surrounding, 1

  as predictor of lunar eclipses, 46, 48

  prehistoric monuments surround, 133

  radiocarbon dating of, 23, 40, 42, 45, 108, 128, 135, 169, 184, 185, 200, 230, 247, 303, 307, 332

  Ring of Brodgar compared to, 99, 324

  Roman pottery found at, 32, 170

  sarsens at, see great trilithon, lintels, sarsen: dressing, sarsen circle, trilithons

  second batch of bluestones delivered to, 224

  selection of people for burial at, biases in, 201

  settlement remains at, absence of, 4

  siting of, questions surrounding, 231

  siting of, reason for, 244, 246

  and snails, 164, 240

  and solstices, 41, 45, 48, 144, 161, 173, 180, 198, 245; see also Stonehenge: astronomical factors concerning

  spiritual symbolism of, 273

  stakeholes at, 73, 73, 191, 192

  “stone copy” theory of, 5, 10, 314, 316, 317, 325, 334

  stoneholes at, explained, 43

  summary of Riverside Project’s findings concerning, 341

  timber posts at, 234

  twentieth-century excavations at, 51

  undiscovered sites around, 228

  unification, as monument to, 328, 331

  units of measurement used in building, 254, 258, 260

  visitor center at, 1, 40, 233

  woodworking techniques used in building of, 334; see also Stonehenge: “stone copy” theory of

  Stonehenge (Atkinson), 280; see also Atkinson, Richard

  Stonehenge: Ancient Voices, 9

  Stonehenge Archer, 195, 212, 304

  Stonehenge Avenue, 10, 31, 41, 96, 108, 157, 216, 238, 241, 247, 310, 345

  arrowhead from, 67

  discussion on indirect path of, 226

  ditches and banks of, 221, 223, 226, 240, 258, 310, 311, 346

  elbow of, 240, 241, 241, 242

  meets River Avon, 2, 7, 10, 14, 93, 157, 216, 226, 240, 343, 344

  Newall’s Mound to east of, 242, 247

  periglacial features under, 242, 243, 245, 249, 310

  width of, 240

  Stonehenge Bottom, 140, 232, 240, 241

  Stonehenge Decoded (Hawkins), 46

  Stonehenge Environs Project, 133, 134, 140, 167, 236, 238

  Stonehenge in Its Landscape (Cleal et al.), 42, 108, 128, 1
85

  Stonehenge Inn, 3

  Stonehenge Palisade, 234, 235, 238

  Stonehenge People, The (Burl), 13

  Stonehenge Riverside Project, 62, 167, 229, 314

  Arts and Humanities Research Council grant for, 92

  discoveries of, summary, 341

  discussions on start of, 56

  duration of, 3

  first fieldwork season of, 61

  labor organization during, 116

  plowsoil dug up by, 71

  post-excavation work by, 92

  in Preseli, 283

  Royal Archaeological Institute award applied for by, 62

  starting, 50

  student participation in, 61

  trench-digging by, logistics of, 70

  Stonehenge’s new sequence, 309

  1st stage, 3000–2920 BC, Middle Neolithic, 30, 307, 309, 330

  2nd stage, 2620–2480 BC, Late Neolithic, 31, 310

  3rd stage, 2480–2280 BC, Copper Age, 32, 310

  4th stage, 2280–2020 BC, Early Bronze Age, 33, 311

  5th stage, 1680–1520 BC, Middle Bronze Age, 34, 311

  Stones of Stenness, 324

  stratigraphy, 44, 135, 170, 172

  Strumble-Preseli Ancient Communities and Environment Study (SPACES), 275, 277

  Stukeley, William, 2, 31, 45, 46, 140, 151, 177, 179, 252

  drawing of druid by, 178

  sketch of sarsens near Clatford by, 296, 298, 299

  and unit of measurement used, 254

  Sumba, 268

  Swanton, Gill, 154

  Sweet Track, 21

  Syria, 18

  T

  Tacitus, 179

  Tandroy people, 273

  Tao Te Ching, 12

  Tara, 274

  Theoretical Archaeology Conference, 93

  Thorn, Alexander, 39, 46, 48, 110, 254, 256

  Thomas, Herbert, 264, 268

  Thomas, Julian, 3, 21, 58, 61

  Greater Cursus excavations by, 142

  Southern Circle excavation by, 86, 89

  Western Enclosures excavation by, 94, 100, 104, 335

  Thorpe, Richard, 265

  Thurnham, John, 145

  Till tributary, 145

  Tilley, Chris, 3, 59, 151, 157

  Time Team, 83, 124

  Timewatch, 303, 306

  tooth enamel, 118, 120, 200, 212, 320

  see also isotopic analysis

  Tor (Bulford) Stone, 150, 151

  trepanation, 281

  trilithons, 27, 31, 34, 40, 43, 45, 89, 102, 109, 115, 169, 200, 209, 251, 255, 258, 260, 293, 307, 310, 313, 335, 338, 339, 343; see also great trilithon

  Turkey, 12, 18, 137

  Turner, Peter, 265

  U

  Upper Ninepence, 335, 337

  Upton Lovell, 154

  V

  Vale of Pewsey, 121, 296, 299

  Vatcher, Faith, 135, 227, 233, 248

  Vatcher, Maj. Lance, 135, 227, 233, 248

  Vespasian’s Camp, 156, 353

  Vestra Fjold, 284

  Viner, Sarah, 119, 120

  Vitruvius, 254

  W

  Wainwright, Geoff

  and bluestones, theories concerning, 278, 280

  Durrington Walls excavation by, 53, 58, 81, 86, 104, 106, 113, 118, 150, 196, 343

  and glacial-movement theory, 275

  Marden excavation by, 300

  new chronology of Stonehenge worked on by, 307

  Stonehenge excavation by, 166, 303

  work in Preseli by, 275

  Walton Basin, 327

  Washington, DC, architecture of, 12

  wattle-and-daub houses, 63

  see also Durrington Walls: houses

  Waun Mawn, 283, 288, 289

  Welham, Kate, 3, 57, 70, 246, 248, 299

  Welshpool, 327

  Wessex, 6, 58, 59, 99, 107, 184, 214, 243, 271, 275, 300, 317, 319, 328

  chalklands of, famed for archaeological remains, 71

  discussed, 6n

  formation of flint from, 66

  Grooved Ware spreads to, 330

  “rich” graves found in, 349

  soil fertility of, 352

  Wessex Archaeology, 42, 133, 209, 228, 317

  Wessex Culture, 350

  Wessex I and II burials, 350

  West Amesbury, 23, 216

  see also Amesbury; Bluestonehenge

  West Kennet, 60, 139, 234, 334, 346

  West Stow, 319, 322

  Whittle, Alasdair, 13, 234

  Wicca, 177

  Williams-Thorpe, Olwen, 265, 270

  Windmill Hill, 139, 282

  witches, 177

  Wood, John, 33

  Woodhenge, 3, 5, 5 81, 82, 83, 85, 93, 94, 95, 182, 196, 336, 339, 342, 344, 345

  stoneholes found within, 94, 155

  units of measurement of, 259

  Woodlands, 159

  Wyke Down, 158, 320

  Y

  Y and Z Holes, 311, 312

  yard, megalithic, 254, 256

  Young, William, 141, 167, 181, 187, 248, 262

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  __________

  MIKE PARKER PEARSON is a professor at the Institute of Archaeology at University College London and an internationally renowned expert in the archaeology of death. The author of sixteen books and over 100 academic papers, he led the Stonehenge Riverside Project from 2003 to 2009. He has appeared in the National Geographic Channel documentary Stonehenge Decoded and in the NOVA episode “Secrets of Stonehenge.”

  FOOTNOTES

  __________

  a Neolithic means New Stone Age; it follows the Old Stone Age (Paleolithic) and the Middle Stone Age (Mesolithic). Neolithic peoples used stone tools, made pottery, and kept domestic animals.

  b BC is still standard terminology for European prehistory.

  c The lintels are the horizontal stones that rest on top of the upright stones of the circle. Most of them have been taken away over the millennia, but some are still in their original position; others are now lying in the grass around the feet of the upright stones.

  d The term Wessex has three major meanings. It is originally the name of the Kingdom of the West Saxons in southwest England, whose king was Alfred the Great and last earl (until modern times) King Harold. The name was used by Thomas Hardy for a (very large) fictional county in his novels set in Dorset and southwest England; Hardy’s revival of the term is the source of most modern uses of the word (e.g., Wessex Water, the regional supplier). The name is used most frequently by archaeologists as useful shorthand when referring to the southern English counties of Dorset, Wiltshire, and parts of Somerset, Berkshire, and Oxfordshire during the prehistoric period.

  e Jadeitite consists almost entirely of jadeite, the name by which jadeitite axes were formerly known.

  f This is Stone 27 according to the Flinders Petrie numbering system.

  g An archaeological plan shows all the things that can be seen in the ground—changes in soil color, shapes of pits and postholes, and large objects—and is drawn by standing over the excavation trench looking down at the ground. A section is a drawing of the edge of a trench as seen from the side. It shows a slice through all the layers of soil, from top to bottom. A plan is therefore a horizontal drawing, and a section is a vertical drawing. These scale drawings on waterproof paper are the most important of all excavation records; today they are digitized during post-excavation. After an excavation is published, the originals are sent to secure storage (usually in a museum), where they can be consulted by the next generation of archaeologists.

  h The Heel Stone is a large and unworked sarsen that stands by itself to the northeast of Stonehenge at the beginning of the avenue.

  i These stones survive only as stoneholes; two of them, known as Stoneholes B and C, were found by Hawley.

 

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