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Re: Britain's Ancient Capital: Secrets Of Orkney
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Evergreen Dazed wrote:
tiompan wrote:
Annexus Quam wrote:
Celebrate Neolithic Orkney – but leave out Stonehenge.
Thanks for that great article - Orcadian prehistory is insular and far more interesting than that. Not at all suggesting I am against large-scale cultural and human contacts in prehistory but, at least we are evolving :-) in the past century, 'connections with Greece or Egypt were mandatory', now it is getting hard to escape the psychological pull of Wiltshire. I thought the same (not again!) about it once the programme started. Bit it's peak time TV, Neil Oliver, etc. Mind you, archaeology everywhere needs this hype in order to survive and I bet letting everyone (that includes petty councillors and their neighbours) believe whatever feeds their imagination will pay for the next dig. 'Reality' gets boring, even more so in this day and age of short attention spans and tweets.

It struck me the author mentioned very old RC dates for their earthwork enclosures. Maybe I misunderstood but is there an intention there to suggest anything other than 'dates so far are the oldest found in UK enclosures'?? He then adds 'enclosures are common but not everywhere in Britain'. I am interested in the RC dating, as enclosures are such a common (but little researched) Euro-phenomenon, and very ancient too.


Long time no see AQ .

Whittle and Bayliss's "Gathering Time " is the go to book for causewayed enclosure dating ,although almost entirely related to UK .
Arbon Bleiche 3 settlement in Northern Switzerland predates any UK enclosure by 3-400 years .
Other LBK enclosures (6th millenium BC ) , and Rondels (5 th millenium BC predate them too .
Hambledon Hill : The main enclosure built 3675-3630 bc (95%)
Whitesheet hill: built 3790 -3520 (95%).

Have to mention the ring ditch at Shepperton ,as it it is at the end of the lane where J.G.Ballard lived for many years . built 3885-3380 (95%)


The relatively recent discovery at Thame looks v interesting.
I don't think dates have been published yet.

http://www.berksarch.co.uk/ind[...]coveries-at-thame-oxfordshire/



Mmmmm . It does .


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tiompan
Posted by tiompan
29th January 2017ce
14:17

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