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Home Front: Tech
Archaeologists figure out mystery of Stonehenge bluestones
2005-06-26
ARCHAEOLOGISTS have solved one of the greatest mysteries of Stonehenge - the exact spot from where its huge stones were quarried.
A team has pinpointed the precise place in Wales from where the bluestones were removed in about 2500 BC.
It found the small crag-edged enclosure at one of the highest points of the 1,008ft high Carn Menyn mountain in Pembrokeshire's Preseli Hills.
The enclosure is just over one acre in size but, according to team leader Professor Tim Darvill, it provides a veritable "Aladdin's Cave" of made-to-measure pillars for aspiring circle builders. Within and outside the enclosure are numerous prone pillar stones with clear signs of working. Some are fairly recent and a handful of drill holes attest to the technology used. Other blocks may have been wrenched from the ground or the crags in ancient times.
They were then moved 240 miles to the famous site at Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire.
The discovery comes a year after scientists proved that the remains of a "band of brothers" found near Stonehenge were Welshmen who transported the stones. The skeletons were found by workmen laying a pipe on Boscombe Down and chemical analysis of their teeth revealed they were brought up in South West Wales.
Experts believed the family accompanied the stones on their epic journey from the Preseli Hills to Salisbury Plain.
Now Prof Darvill, colleague Geoff Wainwright, a retired English Heritage archaeologist, and six researchers and students from Bournemouth University have confirmed where exactly they uncovered the stones.
The team have spent the past three years on the project.
They scoured a 3km-square area in the highest points of Carn Menyn where they made the amazing discovery.
Prof Darvill said, "When we came across the enclosure we couldn't believe it. You dream about finding things like this but don't really think they exist. We have done geological and chemical tests which are still ongoing but show the quarry is the exact place.
"Geographically, the bluestones are very distinctive and could have only come from a very certain area. We already knew it was in the Preseli Hills but the geological tests combined with the chemical test results make us sure we have found it.
"Nobody can be sure why the stones were taken from there to Salisbury but I believe it is because they were regarded as holy or to do with a deity of some kind.
"This is a great discovery and opens up the door for many more.
"Hopefully in the future we will be able to trace the exact holes where the stones were extracted from. It isn't going to be a massive hole in the ground as we understand a quarry to be these days.
"In 2500 BC things were a lot more primitive so the builders would have looked for rocks which were naturally displaced.
"They then would have put them on a river and taken them to Stonehenge that way.
The "band of brothers" found last year, were a family unit of three adults, one teenager and three children buried in the same grave 4,300 years ago, at the start of the metal age.
The family were found on Boscombe Down and were soon christened the "Boscombe bowmen."
The burials were found near to the site where the famously wealthy "Amesbury archer" was uncovered three years ago.
Prof Darvill's discovery will be published in the July-August edition of British Archaeology.
He has been researching Stonehenge for the last 10 years.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#11  "When archaelogists don't know why something occured they say its religous."

Exactly phil_b.
Here's a hilarious book that parodies that tendency perfectly.
Posted by: xbalanke   2005-06-26 21:56  

#10  Barb, 4 out of 5 Salisbury's surveyed dentists report that chewing Stonehenge rock "may reduce the risk of tooth decay" if chewed after meals)
Posted by: Red Dog   2005-06-26 19:05  

#9  Perhaps they were monitoring for catastrophic shifts of the Earth's crust by making sure the stars are always where they are supposed to be.
Posted by: eLarson   2005-06-26 18:14  

#8  Blast it! I saw the headline, I thought they'd found out what the place was for!
Posted by: Korora   2005-06-26 17:44  

#7  ah stone worshipers like the mohammedans--but these guys worshipped BIG stones that were transported over river and dale--mo's people worship tiny meteorites that fall from the sky--gawd what boadica could've done to the armies of islam like berber queen kahina
Posted by: SON OF TOLUI   2005-06-26 16:36  

#6  When archaelogists don't know why something occured they say its religous.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-06-26 15:20  

#5  My teeth reveal that I was brought up in England, when I don't leave them on the nightstand, that is.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2005-06-26 14:48  

#4  Hey, someday 4,300 years from now scientists may be looking at a crater in a comet and wondering where it came from and why.
Posted by: Tom   2005-06-26 14:35  

#3  
chemical analysis of their teeth revealed they were brought up in South West Wales.
I'd love a more detailed explanation of that.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-06-26 14:28  

#2  So, will Welsh nationalists now demand they be returned?
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2005-06-26 14:16  

#1  I have this sudden urge to watch Spinal Tap.
Posted by: Raj   2005-06-26 11:25  

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