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April 20, 2004

South Korean Rock Art Hints at Whaling Origins

news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3638853.stm

Stone Age people may have started hunting whales as early as 6,000 BC, new evidence from South Korea suggests.

Analysis of rock carvings at Bangu-Dae archaeological site in Ulsan in the southeast of the country revealed more than 46 depictions of large whales.

They also show evidence that humans used harpoons, floats and lines to catch their prey, which included sperm whales, right whales and humpbacks.

Details of the research are published in the journal L’Anthropologie.

“You have representations of dolphins and whales, with people on boats using harpoons and lines. It is a scene of whaling,” co-investigator Daniel Robineau told BBC News Online.

For example, one scene shows people standing in a curved boat connected via a line to a whale.

Social importance

The rock engravings, or petroglyphs, seem to have been made at a range of different times between 6,000 and 1,000 BC.

At nearby occupation sites dating to between 5,000 and 1,500 BC, archaeologists have unearthed large quantities of cetacean bones – a sure sign that whales were an important food source for populations in the area.

Other species represented on the rocks at Bangu-dae include orcas (killer whales), minke whales, and dolphins.

Dr Robineau and Sang-Mog Lee, of the Museum of Kyungpook National University in Bukgu Daegu in South Korea, suggest whaling played an important role in social cohesion in the lives of the people who made the petroglyphs, similar to that which has been observed in historic Inuit populations.

Some of the depictions of whales also bear what appear to be fleshing lines, where the hunters divided up the meat after capturing and killing the mammals.

Art Archaeology Landscape Study Day

Study Day

ART, ARCHAEOLOGY & LANDSCAPE
Sat 24th April 10.00-5.00pm
FCE 32 Tavistock Square, London

Art Archaeology Landscape Fay Stevens

Development in rock art studies throughout Britain Stan Beckensall

Ad majoram Dei gloriam: ecclesiastical architecture and the Medieval
landscape Stuart Brookes

Art and the re-presentation of the past Sue Hamilton

Excavate overlay: a project linking art, archaeology and landscape
Sara Bowler

Fee: #30 (#15 concessions) To enrol call: 020 7631 6627

Student Considers Mound a Key Archaic Site

UW student considers mound a key archaic site
By SUSANNE QUICK

In the middle of a swampy island inhabited by some of the most dangerous cocaine runners in the Americas, there lies an ancient Garden of Eden.

Ancient Mound Discovered

Discovered and uncovered by John Hodgson, a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, this archaeological site may prove to be a crucial piece of the puzzle known as the late archaic period of Mesoamerica – a time period about 5,000 years ago in a region that includes Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

And it may shed light on the factors that prompted a transition from a purely hunting and gathering society to one more complex.

“This could reshape a whole set of questions that I’ve been asking for the last 30 years,” said John Clark, a professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, and a collaborator of Hodgson’s.

In addition, the site, which is on an island along the Pacific Coast of Chiapas, Mexico, may indicate that civilization, at least in this region, was not borne on the back-breaking bones of environmental hardship, overpopulation and hunger, but within a resource-enriched paradise of bountiful food, fish, plants and raw materials.

“That goes against the traditional framework” of how civilizations rose, Clark said.

Other researchers, however, think the leap from this find – a large shell mound – to the dawn of Mesoamerican civilization may be a bit premature.

The discovery of Alvarez del Toro – the name Hodgson gave the site, in honor of a famous Mexican zoologist – was announced by UW officials.

And because nobody other than Hodgson has seen the site (although he did take photographs of it that Clark and a few others have seen) – nor has it been evaluated in a peer-reviewed journal – many researchers are remaining circumspect about the find.

Alvarez del Toro can best be described as a very large shell mound.

And although other shell mounds have been found in the region – which are thought to be either huge garbage dumps, called middens, or evidence of successive “clam-bakes” – Hodgson and Clark said this late archaic shell mound is unique.

More than 240 feet long, 90 feet wide and 21 feet tall, this 5,000-year-old structure appears to have layers of flooring that were laid down every 20 to 30 years over a 500-year period.

“Regardless of whether or not this turns out to be a sedentary site occupied year-round, it is still potentially important for a variety of reasons,” said Jason Yaeger, a professor of anthropology at UW who was not involved in the project but has seen Hodgson’s photographs.

Yaeger said the early date of the mound, which Hodgson has verified at two different laboratories using half a dozen samples, combined with its long occupancy and the “significant and unprecedented” amount of labor involved in its construction all contradict current ideas of how people were living in this region around 3,000 B.C.

The common understanding is that people were hunter-gatherers – an anthropological description of a society that is generally on the move, hunting and collecting food. This find, Yaeger said, indicates that these people had “long-term ties to this particular place on the landscape.”

“We know that structures like this are the basis for later Aztec and Mayan” ritual buildings – such as the Maya pyramids of Tikal in Guatemala, Yaeger said.

However, he cautioned that Hodgson’s find is more than 1,000 years older than these later structures and not necessarily indicative of a sudden rise to civilized society.

“There are other contemporaneous or earlier examples of formalized ritual spaces in Mesoamerica,” he said, citing Gheo Shin, a large, flat open space surrounded by boulders, discovered in Oaxaca, Mexico.

“There is no sign of habitation or debris in it,” he said – just like Alvarez del Toro – and it is believed to have been an open-air dance site where groups of hunter-gatherers would gather to perform ritual dances, exchange marriage partners and trade goods.

“It’s possible that Alvarez del Toro is also a long-term meeting place for mobile hunter-gatherer groups, although clearly more formalized than Gheo Shin,” he said.

But, “that would be the least-exciting possible interpretation,” said Yaeger.

Instead, the most exciting possibility, he said, is that it ends up being a permanent village.

More data needed
But all of these scenarios will have to wait until more data can be collected.

Barbara Voorhies, a professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of California-Santa Barbara and an expert in the late archaic period of the Pacific region, agrees.

“I have been working on the Chiapas shell mounds since the 1960s and have investigated them in considerable detail,” she said.

In the shell mounds she has excavated, she has interpreted the layers as being sequential clam bakes. These may be different from the layers Hodgson has found, but it’s too early to tell.

“It is impossible to say” from a UW news release whether this “new shell mound is like the ones I have studied in detail, or not,” she said.

If post holes can be found – areas where structural supports were put in the ground to construct a wooden building – “the new mound would prove to be different from the known ones,” she said.

But it seems premature to say anything too definitive about the site at this time, she said, especially in light of the information available for the “clam-bake” sites.

At the same time, however, “it would be wrong to think that site structure at the new site must be the same as the nearby shell mounds since site structure and contents do vary,” she said.

Hodgson is planning to return this fall to see if he can unearth more of the structure, search for post holes and possibly find other structures nearby.

Brigham Young’s Clark believes Hodgson will find these things.

“It makes sense to look for the origins of Mesoamerican civilization in marshes,” such as the one Hodgson’s mound is in, said Clark. “I consider investigating the potential of this site to be the number one priority” for archaeologists in the region.

jsonline.com/alive/news/apr04/223112.asp

Dig at Housing Site Sheds Light on Prehistoric Settlers

Stephen Stewart – April 19 2004

Archaeologists will have a greater understanding of the lives of the people who built great ritual monuments such as Stonehenge following excavations at one of Scotland’s largest rural settlements.

A dig at a new housing development in Dreghorn, Ayrshire, has revealed major medieval remains and Neolithic features including the site of a ceremonial pole, houses and a pottery kiln.
The site suggests a 5000-year-old village similar in scale to the group of stone houses at Skara Brae, Orkney, and is helping historians “rewrite pre-history”.

Large amounts of grooved ware pottery, a decorated ceramic that seems to have evolved in Scotland and is found across the UK at ceremonial monuments including henge earthworks and timber structures, were also found.

Tom Addyman is excavation director of Addyman Associates, who carried out the ongoing dig at the George Wimpey housing development.

He said: “This was part of a five-acre development where it was suspected from documents, including an aerial photograph taken in the 1940s, that there was evidence of prehistoric remains.
“Once we had gone in and tested the ground by cutting strips across the land, we found there were very substantial remains of the low sides of the medieval village and strong evidence of agricultural activity with two or three corn-drying kilns.
“Very often these kilns caught alight and the grain turned to charcoal that could be dated to the thirteenth century. There had been a hint of prehistory but we excavated a two-acre trench and at the top of the slope there was a great deal more prehistoric activity behind the village street.

“We found 750-odd pieces of grooved ware, which is one of the largest collections in the south-west of Scotland. (The area) is now known as a type site for the Neolithic period, which means that all other sites will be compared to this one.”
Experts believed the site, between the River Irvine and Annick Water, was chosen in the twelfth century for a settlement, then abandoned after 200 years, possibly because of rising water levels. But older finds indicate the area was settled considerably earlier.

Mr Addyman said: “We are now able to build up a picture of how these people lived and understand how things were organised on the ground.

“There is certainly a lot for us to consider.” Mike Pitts, editor of British Archaeology magazine, said: “Finding evidence at this date for settlement, in the form of building foundations and for pottery making, is extremely rare, and promises to help us understand the lives of the people who built the great ritual monuments like henges and early stone circles.”

Archaeologists will have a greater understanding of the lives of the people who built great ritual monuments such as Stonehenge following excavations at one of Scotland’s largest rural settlements.

A dig at a new housing development in Dreghorn, Ayrshire, has revealed major medieval remains and Neolithic features including the site of a ceremonial pole, houses and a pottery kiln.
The site suggests a 5000-year-old village similar in scale to the group of stone houses at Skara Brae, Orkney, and is helping historians “rewrite pre-history”.

Large amounts of grooved ware pottery, a decorated ceramic that seems to have evolved in Scotland and is found across the UK at ceremonial monuments including henge earthworks and timber structures, were also found.

Tom Addyman is excavation director of Addyman Associates, who carried out the ongoing dig at the George Wimpey housing development.

He said: “This was part of a five-acre development where it was suspected from documents, including an aerial photograph taken in the 1940s, that there was evidence of prehistoric remains.
“Once we had gone in and tested the ground by cutting strips across the land, we found there were very substantial remains of the low sides of the medieval village and strong evidence of agricultural activity with two or three corn-drying kilns.
“Very often these kilns caught alight and the grain turned to charcoal that could be dated to the thirteenth century. There had been a hint of prehistory but we excavated a two-acre trench and at the top of the slope there was a great deal more prehistoric activity behind the village street.

“We found 750-odd pieces of grooved ware, which is one of the largest collections in the south-west of Scotland. (The area) is now known as a type site for the Neolithic period, which means that all other sites will be compared to this one.”

Experts believed the site, between the River Irvine and Annick Water, was chosen in the twelfth century for a settlement, then abandoned after 200 years, possibly because of rising water levels. But older finds indicate the area was settled considerably earlier.

Mr Addyman said: “We are now able to build up a picture of how these people lived and understand how things were organised on the ground.

” There is certainly a lot for us to consider.” Mike Pitts, editor of British Archaeology magazine, said: “Finding evidence at this date for settlement, in the form of building foundations and for pottery making, is extremely rare, and promises to help us understand the lives of the people who built the great ritual monuments like henges and early stone circles.”

Archaeologists will have a greater understanding of the lives of the people who built great ritual monuments such as Stonehenge following excavations at one of Scotland’s largest rural settlements.

A dig at a new housing development in Dreghorn, Ayrshire, has revealed major medieval remains and Neolithic features including the site of a ceremonial pole, houses and a pottery kiln.
The site suggests a 5000-year-old village similar in scale to the group of stone houses at Skara Brae, Orkney, and is helping historians “rewrite pre-history”.

Large amounts of grooved ware pottery, a decorated ceramic that seems to have evolved in Scotland and is found across the UK at ceremonial monuments including henge earthworks and timber structures, were also found.

Tom Addyman is excavation director of Addyman Associates, who carried out the ongoing dig at the George Wimpey housing development.

He said: “This was part of a five-acre development where it was suspected from documents, including an aerial photograph taken in the 1940s, that there was evidence of prehistoric remains.
“Once we had gone in and tested the ground by cutting strips across the land, we found there were very substantial remains of the low sides of the medieval village and strong evidence of agricultural activity with two or three corn-drying kilns.
“Very often these kilns caught alight and the grain turned to charcoal that could be dated to the thirteenth century. There had been a hint of prehistory but we excavated a two-acre trench and at the top of the slope there was a great deal more.

theherald.co.uk/news/14279.html

April 19, 2004

Conference – Object-Excavation-Intervention: Dialogues between Sculpture and Archaeology

Conference – Object-Excavation-Intervention: Dialogues between Sculpture and Archaeology, at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds 3-5 June 2004.

This 3 day international conference is dedicated to the intellectual, historical & methodical crossovers between sculpture & archaeology from prehistory to the present. It looks at the myths & metaphors of archaeology & their sculptural currency, the archaeological & sculpural status of the fragment, at the philosophy of place & questions of site-specificity, at the political apprpriation of archaeology by sculptors & writers, and the notion of the artist as archaeologist.

Cost £30 (£15 concessions).
Contact Liz Aston; tel:0113 246 7467
e-mail [email protected]

Update on Iron Age Warrior

heritage.scotsman.com/cfm/heritagenews/headlines_specific.cfm?articleid=428762004

Warrior’s grave points to Druid site

THE discovery of the body of a warrior – thought to have died in battle more than 2,000 years ago – could help archaeologists to pinpoint the site of an ancient Druid holy site, experts said yesterday. The young warrior, aged about 30, with his spear, a sword, his belt and scabbard, stunned archaeologists who found his stone coffin.

The discovery on Marshill, Alloa, last year was hailed as one of the most significant Iron Age finds for decades in Scotland. A copper pin, which once fastened his uniform at the neck, remained, along with rings on two toes and six other rings unlike any found in Scotland before. He was gripping his sword. Experts now believe the hill may have been used for holy ceremonies and burials since the Bronze Age at least 1,500 years earlier.

An Alloa archaeologist, Susan Mills, who along with experts from Glasgow University discovered the grave, also found the skeleton of a Bronze Age woman buried in 2000BC just feet away. More than 20 cremation urns and a cist burial from the Bronze Age were also found there in 1828. A pair of gold bracelets, now on show at the National Museum of Scotland, highlight the importance of those buried in the cemetery, which she believes would once have been marked by a huge cairn.

Mrs Mills said: “It is not just chance that this warrior was buried in such close proximity to the Bronze Age burial ground. What is unique is that this site seems to span more than 1,500 years, and those within it seem to have had considerable wealth. The warrior’s possessions, and the care given to his burial, suggest he was in the upper echelons of his group. Such richly furnished graves are very rare in Scotland. It suggests that this area was regarded as a special, sacred holy ground for more than a millennium. Marshill would have been an ideal location for the pagan communities to site such a significant burial ground, on high land. It is very likely there would have been a cairn so that it could be seen from miles around.”

She said that although the warrior was in Alloa around the time of the Romans’ occupation of the country, he was most likely from Scotland. She said: “The warrior burial is remarkable. Rings from his belt and scabbard have never been found before, so he may have been quite exotic. His specially-made sword blade is 2ft long – much longer than the nearest equivalent found near Falkirk. Although we are not sure exactly how or where he died, his burial site must have been a special place.”

The theory is revealed in the forthcoming edition of Current Archaeology magazine.

GEORGE MAIR
Friday, 16th April 2004
The Scotsman

April 17, 2004

April 16, 2004

TV shows spark 'gardening' crime

BBC Devon

Garden makeover programmes are being blamed for an increase in the theft of ancient artefacts from Dartmoor.

Electronic tags are being used to help protect valuable stone crosses and troughs in the area.

Officials from the Dartmoor National Park Authority say the popularity of TV garden series could be triggering more thefts.

New security measures follow a recent attempt to remove a granite cross.

Jane Marchand, an archaeologist with the park authority, said: “Unfortunately we have lost a number of artefacts and there has been a recent attempt to remove a cross from the moor.

“It is hard to say who is to blame, but I think it’s an interest in garden ornaments from TV gardening shows.

“If you look through auction sales they very often have granite objects for sale.”

The new measures will mean any stolen artefacts can be traced using an electronic scanner.

A microchip, about the size of a grain of rice, is inserted into the granite so it is invisible.

Ms Marchand said: “I think it’s very sad that we have to do this.

“I can’t understand how anyone could think of removing these things.

“But there is some strange irony that we are using the latest technology to help protect these very ancient artefacts.”

South African Cave Yields 'Earliest Jewellery'

From an article on BBC News web site by Jonathan Amos :

The oldest pieces of jewellery made by modern humans have emerged in Africa.

Shell beads found in Blombos Cave on the southern tip of the continent are 75,000 years old, scientists say.

The pea-sized items all have similar holes which would have allowed them to be strung together into a necklace or bracelet, the researchers believe.

More ...

April 12, 2004

Critics Slam Executive Plan to Strip Ancient Monuments

news.scotsman.com/scotland.cfm?id=411962004

Critics slam Executive plan to strip ancient monuments (by Vic Rodrick).

Hundreds of Scotland’s ancient monuments are to be stripped of their protected status in a controversial move by the Executive. Almost 800 archaeological sites considered until now to be of national importance will be dropped from Historic Scotland’s official schedule. The change follows a decision by the Executive to restrict protection to monuments which meet new criteria of “cultural significance” and “spiritual value”.

Critics have attacked the move, accusing the Executive of “betraying Scotland’s heritage” and clearing the way for developers to build on protected sites. Scotland has a host of significant archaeological treasures, including locations dating from prehistoric times. The change of classification will put the future of many of Scotland’s 7,700 ancient forts, carved crosses, standing stones, cairns, war memorials and prehistoric settlements under threat.

Jamie McGrigor MSP, the Conservative culture spokesman said: “These reminders of Scotland’s past are vital for our tourism industry and it’s very important that they are preserved for future generations. We have an extraordinary heritage which is a treasure trove we ignore at our peril.” Roseanna Cunningham MSP, the SNP culture spokeswoman, said: “I find it hard to believe that something considered 20 years ago to be a historic monument of national importance should no longer be considered worthy of protection.”

Robin Harper, the leader of the Scottish Green Party said: “This is an appalling betrayal of a significant proportion of Scotland’s heritage. It’s a gift to the developers who want to build on sites which, on reflection, would be better saved for the nation. Scheduling is a vital tool to protect lesser-known archaeological sites, some of which might be a few stones sticking out of the ground, but all of which are of national importance.”

Officials at Historic Scotland were unable to say which monuments and archaeological sites would be affected by the changes, claiming decisions would be made on a case-by-case basis.

An Executive consultation report revealed that the revised criteria would be applied to every monument currently scheduled, as well as all new finds. It said: “Over time this will sift out monuments that can no longer be justified as being of national importance. It could be argued that some monuments at present on the schedule are not of sufficient importance to merit the very strong presumption against development that scheduled status now provides.”

Future preservation of the de-scheduled monuments will be left to council planning departments and landowners will have to depend on agriculture and forestry grant schemes for any preservation work.

Scientist Mulls Anglo-Scottish Split

news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/3618613.stm

Cultural differences which divide the Scots and the English date back 10,000 years before Britain was an island, a professor has suggested. Stephen Oppenheimer, of Oxford University, says genetic evidence shows Celts descended from ancient people living by the Atlantic coast. The English are more closely related to Germanic people, he added.

The professor was due to speak about his theory at the Edinburgh Science Festival on Sunday. In the past, the split was attributed to migration, invasion and replacement, in particular by the Anglo-Saxons, Celts and Vikings. However, while conceding foreign invasions hundreds of years ago would have influenced the cultures in different areas, he does not believe the split originated then.

Professor Oppenheimer said: “The first line between the English and the Celts was put down at a much earlier period, say 10,000 years ago. The English are the odd-ones-out because they are the ones more linked to continental Europe. The Scots, the Irish, the Welsh and the Cornish are all very similar in their genetic pattern to the Basque.”

This would mean Celts’ roots lie in south west France, Brittany and Spain. The theory is expanded in the professor’s book The Real Eve: Modern Man’s Journey Out of Africa, tracing the origins of humankind to Africa 80,000 years ago. The talk called Out of Eden takes place at the Apex International Hotel in Grassmarket on Sunday.

April 9, 2004

The Neolithic Cat

thescotsman.scotsman.com/scitech.cfm?id=401842004

From the Scotsman – 9/4/04

Ancient grave adds years to feline history

JIM MCBETH

MAN’S second best friend has been around 5,000 years longer than thought, according to scientists who have unearthed evidence of the world’s first pet cat. The animal, buried in a 9,500-year-old grave alongside a human skeleton presumed to be that of its owner, was identified as Felis silvestris, the African wildcat. Historians believed Egyptians first made pets of cats 4,000 years ago. Scientists, however, have suspected that tamed cats existed before the Egyptian era, but there was no evidence.

But now the discovery at Shillourokambos, in Cyprus, a Neolithic village inhabited from 8300BC, provides that evidence of association between cat and human. Archaeologists found artefacts in the grave that indicated that the person had social standing. The cat was buried next to it, in its own grave. Jean-Denis Vigne, the research leader, from the Museum of Natural History in Paris, said: “This strengthens the idea of a special burial and indicates a strong relationship.”

The experts believe that if the cat had not been intentionally buried, its bones would have disarticulated. “Not only is it intentionally buried; it was protected,” said Mr Vigne. It looks as if the animal – aged about eight months – was the person’s pet and had been killed to join its owner in the “afterlife”. Both cat and human had been placed in the ground symmetrically, with their heads pointing to the west.

“I am not completely convinced that the common orientation of the skeletons makes sense,” said Mr Vigne. “However, if it did, I think that this strong proximity between both of them in death should be interpreted as additional evidence of a strong relationship in life.” And he added: “It is an exceptional discovery.”

The discovery excited cat experts. Jo Rothery, the editor of Cat World magazine, said: “It’s fascinating. Hand-reared wild species often make tame pets. This wildcat would never have been as tame as today’s domestic cat, but it could have been manageable as a pet. People say cats are independent animals, but at the same time they relate very closely to people.”

Cats have become the most popular pet in Britain, taking the top spot from dogs two years ago. Roger Breton, an expert on felines, added: “Domestication of cats was not easily accomplished, as they have no built-in co-operative instincts, but the mechanics of it were simple. People gave up nomadic lifestyles for agrarian communities. Stored crops attracted vermin, which attracted wildcats, which were encouraged to stay. First they were approached, then petted and eventually held.”

April 8, 2004

Bronze Age Discovery – Finest in Scottish Borders

Experts from the National Museum are rushing to the Borders after a rare piece of treasure was unearthed near Yetholm.

Local historians are already describing the find as one of the most important ever in the south of Scotland.

And if their early calculations are right – the object may be a 3,000 year-old mirror.
Historical author and broadcaster Alistair Moffat was given a sneak preview of the object this week. He said: “I was absolutely astonished when I saw it. This has to be the find of a lifetime.

Full story here:
borderstoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=968&ArticleID=768320

Common heritage to get one definition

by Maev Kennedy, arts and heritage correspondent, The Guardian, Thursday April 8, 2004

Radical rethink beckons as pilot project looks to impose single register on old and new buildings, public and private sites

An attempt was launched yesterday to devise a single sensible list which can protect a redundant 19th-century steelworks in Sheffield, the imposing Victorian tombs and leaning marble crosses of Arnos Vale cemetery in Bristol, medieval water meadows in Hampshire, London Underground stations on the Piccadilly Line, ancient flint axe works in Cumbria – and the 32-storey Centre Point tower in London.
“We don’t need to test it on simple cases, we need to test it on the most complex cases we can find,” English Heritage chief executive Simon Thurley said.

The 15 pilot projects, for the most radical reform since scheduled ancient monument and listed building protection was introduced over a century ago, include sites in private, public and mixed ownership.

The pilot projects involve reaching management agreements on what makes the sites special and valuable, and how those features should be preserved and enhanced.

The current listing system is frequently adversarial, pitting owners against the heritage quango, and operates mainly as crisis management. Buildings or sites are listed because of their historic importance or interest, but there is generally no further engagement with owners unless drastic alteration is proposed or – for example Greenside, an important Modern Movement house demolished last winter without permission – actually carried out.

One pilot site is the Holkham estate in Norfolk, which includes listed gardens and parkland, and working farms around the Grade I-listed Holkham Hall, and is owned by an English Heritage commissioner, Lord Leicester – Mr Thurley wryly predicted if the system does not work well, they will certainly hear about it.

The government has already said it wants a single register to replace the current plethora of schemes covering everything from Stonehenge to shipwrecks, Capability Brown landscapes to modest Georgian terraced houses.

The head of listing at English Heritage, Peter Beacham, said a listing system designed to protect a 200-year-old thatched cottage did not work well for 20th-century buildings, which are often the most commercially sensitive.

The 1960s Centre Point, designed by Richard Seifert and now Grade II listed, was once a radical cause celebre, when its owner, Harry Hyams, demanded huge rents, did not get them, and then left it empty for almost 20 years. The management plan would allow routine changes to the office interiors, but maintain the uniform look from the exterior, and special consent would be needed for major alterations.

Another tricky case is the University of East Anglia in Norwich, designed by Denis Lasdun, architect of the National Theatre. Although the buildings, many now Grade II*-listed, set in beautifully landscaped grounds, were much admired externally, students have always complained that they froze in winter and baked in summer. The university now argues that it needs to develop the campus to maintain its international competitiveness.

In striking contrast, Langdale neolithic landscapes in Cumbria are mainly open parkland run by the National Trust, where the chief threat is thousands of fell walkers. The site includes such extensive remains of worked flint that dozens of sites – none with any specific designation, or any defence against passing anorak pockets – are now seen as Neolithic flint axe “factories”.

The pilot sites are: Arnos Vale cemetery, Bristol; Centre Point, London; Cornish road and rail bridges; Darnall works, Sheffield; Foulness island, MoD Shoeburyness, Essex; the Godolphin estate, Cornwall; Holkham estate, Norfolk; Kenilworth Castle, Abbey and Mere, Warwickshire; Langdale neolithic landscapes, Cumbria; Piccadilly line, London Underground; RAF Scampton, Lincolnshire; University of East Anglia, Norwich; water meadows, Eastleigh, Hampshire; the Weld estate, Dorset; York city walls.

More on this from a Cumbrian perspective on BBCi here

April 7, 2004

Astronomy study reveals ancient places of healing

Astronomy study reveals ancient places of healing

Mysterious T-shaped monuments scattered around the Mediterranean island of Menorca were most probably places of healing, says an archaeoastronomer who has studied the orientation of the Bronze Age monuments.

Each “taula” – named after the Catalan word for table – is formed by two massive stone blocks arranged in the shape of an upright “T”. The taulas face an opening in a surrounding ring of stones, and all but one of the 30 structures on Menorca face roughly south.


The taulas are usually made from limestone and range between two and five metres (Image: Michael Hoskin)
“It has long been known that these taulas were sanctuaries,” says University of Cambridge archaeoastronomer Michael Hoskin, citing the large number of bones from sacrificial animals that litter the sites.

But the sites were also home to a few intriguing bronze statues, including a bull, an Egyptian figurine with an inscription in hieroglyphics reading, “I am Imhotep the god of medicine” and horse hooves. The latter is particularly curious as there is no known horse god in ancient Mediterranean cultures.

Hoskin was invited to study the sites’ orientation to understand the significance of both the bronze statues and why no taulas are found on the nearby island of Mallorca. The taulas’ southern orientation – facing the sea or looking down from a hillside – gave him an important clue.

“What was near the southern horizon that was of interest?” Hoskin wondered. Today the answer is not much. But over time, gravitational tugs from the Sun, Moon, and planets make the Earth wobble on its axis like a spinning top.

For this reason, the night sky would have looked slightly different in 1000 BC, when the taulas were constructed. At that time, the entrance to the taulas framed the seasonal rise of a constellation known as Centaurus by the ancient Greeks. Today, it is split into the constellation of the Southern Cross, followed by the bright stars Beta and Alpha Centauri.

In Greek mythology, the Centaur – who had a man’s head and a horse’s body – taught medicine to Asclepius, the god of medicine.

Myths circulated around the Mediterranean and Near East even before the taulas were made and the different cultures engaged in a lot of trade, “so it is entirely possible – but not proven, of course – that the Menorcans had a similar view of Centaurus [as the ancient Greeks],” Hoskin told New Scientist.

The association with healing could explain the bronze hooves – which could be the remains of a statue of the Centaur, the Egyptian medicine god figurine – possibly left by an Egyptian sailor – and even the absence of taulas on neighboring Mallorca.

“Menorca is flat and you can see the Southern Cross, etc., from almost any location,” Hoskin explains. Settlements on mountainous Mallorca, on the other hand, were located in valleys “from which the Cross was invisible because it was screened by the surrounding hills”.

Steve McCluskey, a historian of astronomy at West Virginia University in Morgantown, West Virginia, US, says Hoskin’s astronomical and archaeological evidence “combine to provide strong indications of a healing cult at this site”.

McCluskey also said Hoskin has “fundamentally transformed” archaeoastronomy by showing that the builders of these monuments were little concerned with the “highly precise orientations that had formerly been the touchstone of archaeoastronomical investigations”. Pointing their constructions in roughly the right direction appears to have sufficed.

newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994849

April 6, 2004

Archeao Astronomy Article

The sun and stars may have served as critical references for a startlingly diverse range of ancient builders who constructed chambers to hold the dead and other religious shrines.

The orientation of thousands of Neolithic tombs erected across Europe and Africa around 10,000 B.C. were apparently built to face the rising sun, securing the sun’s importance in various human cultures across three countries, two continents and the Mediterranean islands, according to one astronomy historian

space.com/scienceastronomy/ancient_tombs_040405.html

April 2, 2004

Scottish film studio plans threaten ancient sites

Plans for a massive film studio and housing development at Aberuthven in Perthshire, Scotland, have placed under threat an area rich in ancient sites. Qullico 100 has submitted plans for the huge complex which will not only impact on local archaeology, but will also dwarf the existing village.

The proposed studio site is bound to the north by the River Earn, and to the south by the village of Aberuthven. In this relatively small area is to be found an extensive complex of prehistoric ceremonial and funerary monuments, suggesting this site was an important ritual centre over thousands of years.

The most visible remains of this complex is a 2 metre high standing stone, known alternately as Haugh of Aberuthven or Belhie, dated to 3000 BCE and standing on the edge of a 22 metre wide enclosure defined by a 2 metre wide ditch, identified as a probable henge. A few metres to the north-east is a penannular ring-ditch of 8 metres diameter, which has been been identified as a possible “mini-henge”.

Both these sites have been scheduled by Historic Scotland, and as such will have a protective “buffer zone” around them during any development work. However, while these sites won’t be destroyed, their aspect and ambience will be dramatically altered – currently at the centre of a field, the plans will see them hemmed in on all sides by 2 car parks, a golf clubhouse and a hotel.

Also scheduled is the Drumtogle enclosure at the north-east end of the village, which under the proposed plans will end up sandwiched between two busy roads. Amongst the other sites under threat are the remains of a four-poster stone circle, a Class I henge, an enclosed cremation cemetery, a barrow, a probable palisaded homestead, several ring-ditches, pits and enclosures, not to mention numerous crop-marks – linear and scattered – whose significance has yet to be established.

Because many of these sites are sub-surface archaeology or only visible as crop-marks, the potential impact on them from the excavation and construction processes is total destruction.

Following the first application by Qullico 100 in February 2003, local residents set up ACT (Aberuthven Community Threatened). Bill Fyfe of ACT said “The village at present consists of 130 houses and has a population of 300 people. The proposed development is to add 606 houses which would result in approximately 1500 more residents. We felt the need to pool our resources to fight the development and our chosen way of life.”

The local authority, Perth & Kinross Council, have so far received over 450 letters of objection to the development. Anyone concerned by the proposed plans and their impact on the local environment should write, expressing those concerns, to:

Mr Ian Sleith
Planning and Development Director
Perth & Kinross Council
35 Kinnoull Street
Perth
PH1 5GD
Scotland

Letters will be accepted up until the planning meeting in June or July.

Source: Stone Pages – Archaeo News

Ancient Flints Found on Cairngorms

news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/3581355.stm

Archaeologists are excited by a discovery which they say proves that early Scottish settlers travelled through the Cairngorms 7,000 years ago. More than 80 pieces of worked flint and quartz dating from the Mesolithic period have been found at a site in Glen Dee near Braemar. The finds were made by chance during conservation work on footpaths.

Experts say it proves people moved through the landscape in seasonal cycles gathering and hunting for food. Most of the knowledge of the period so far has come from sites on the coast. These groups of people may have been very familiar with what even today are considered to be extremely challenging Highland landscapes

Dr Shannon Fraser, archaeologist for the National Trust for Scotland in the North East, said: “We suspected that major route ways through the Cairngorms, such as the Lairig Ghru, may have been used by our earliest Scottish settlers as they moved through the landscape in seasonal cycles, fishing, hunting and collecting other foods and useful materials. But without any physical evidence for the presence of these people, we just couldn’t prove it. What is so exciting is that these tiny fragments of worked stone, some only a few millimetres long, suggest that these groups of people may have been very familiar with what even today are considered to be extremely challenging Highland landscapes.”

Further study funded by Aberdeenshire Council has demonstrated that both tool-making activities and the use of the tools themselves were happening at the site. The finds include both broken tools and the waste flakes produced when working pieces of flint.

Caroline Wickham-Jones, a consultant archaeologist specialising in the Mesolithic of Scotland, said: “This is a very important find because it helps to fill in one of the most glaring of gaps in our knowledge of the early settlement of Scotland: what was going on in the interior of the country.”

Man Explores Mystery of Stonehenge – Stone Moving

Flint-area resident taps ‘forgotten technology’ to move massive objects

FLINT — Some may find it odd that a 57-year-old man goes out into his yard to play with blocks.

But then, the blocks that Wallace T. Wallington moves around near his home in a rural Flint area weigh up to nearly 10 tons. And by himself, he moves these behemoth playthings, not with cranes and cables, but with wooden levers.

“It’s more technique than it is technology,” Wallington says. “I think the ancient Egyptians and Britons knew this.”

Last October, a production crew from Discovery Channel in Canada came to Wallington’s home to film him as he raised a 16-foot, rectangular concrete block that weighed 19,200 pounds and set it into a hole. That taping was made into a segment, which has aired on Discovery Canada and the Discovery Science program in the United States.

The project resulted in a column, standing more than 10 feet high in his yard. He says he intends to construct his own kind of Stonehenge — without cranes or any modern engines or machines. He believes that’s the way ancient people moved and constructed the great landmarks of the world.

For the full story, vist...
detnews.com/2004/metro/0404/01/d06e-109393.htm

Leicester Archaeologists find 5000-year-old Human Remains

By Corinne Field 01/04/2004

Bones of a man and woman dating back to 3000BC have been found in a gravel pit in Leicestershire. The extraordinary find, including a skull, vertebrae and long bones, are the earliest human remains ever found in the county.

Not only that but a series of timber uprights for a footbridge dating back to AD500, remnants of the only early Anglo-Saxon bridge known in Britain, were uncovered at the same spot.

Both discoveries were made at a gravel quarry near Watermead Country Park, Birstall eight years ago by archaeologists from the University of Leicester but investigations and analysis of the finds have only just been completed.

Dr Patrick Clay, Director of University of Leicester Archaeological Services said, “This is a remarkable discovery literally from the jaws of the gravel excavators.”

For the full story, visit...
24hourmuseum.org.uk/nwh/ART20695.html

Stone Age child’s bones found in Aukra – Norway

Norwegian archaeologists were ecstatic this week after making a rare discovery at Aukra in Romsdal, north-central Norway. They’ve confirmed finding bone fragments from a child who must have lived in the area around 6,000 years ago.

Archaeologists have confirmed that this fragment was part of a Stone Age child’s chin.

The discovery was made in connection with excavations underway for the new land-base for the Ormen Lange gas field in the North Sea. Industrial concern Norsk Hydro is developing the gas field but its excavations are being conducted in cooperation with archaeologists.

Researchers know that the area around Aukra featured ancient settlements, and several thousand items already have been found and recorded.

“We knew, of course, that there were children in the Stone Age as well, but we’re probably guilty of focusing on the male hunters from the period,” Hein Bjerck, from the Science Museum in Trondheim (Vitenskapsmuseet i Trondheim), told newspaper Aftenposten

“But when we actually find a child, it’s almost heartbreaking,” Bjerck said. It’s the first time a child’s remains from so long ago have been found in Norway.

He said that initial examination suggests the child was between two and four years old at time of death. The child’s bone fragments were found in a compact mass of sand. Archaeologists also noted contures in the sand that probably were made by a human body, as long ago as 5,000 BC.

Bjerck and members of his team were ecstatic over the discovery because “there’s a lot of facts we can get out of such remains, for example cause of death, physiology and the child’s diet. We’re on the threshold of something very exciting.”

aftenposten.no/english/local/article764163.ece

April 1, 2004

Catastrophic Paint Damage at the Rollrights (Updated)

Abridged from a post by Karin Attwood to the Stones Mailing List today:


Some absolute mindless tw*t(s) seem to think its a good prank to have splattered bright yellow gloss paint over the entire ring in some cases both sides of the stones. Damage was found this morning by a member of a geo-phys team arrving for work.

The oldest measured lichen colony in the UK has a line of paint running down it plus splatters.

EH have been informed and are talking to NT about methods used at Avebury for previous paint vandalism.

In a later post she also wrote:


Hi All

Just returned home from the circle. Frist the bad news – every single one of the stones is splattered both sides, paint splodges vary from 2”-4” and in long lines. If you can imagine someone with a 6” paintbrush and a large tin of gloss soaking the brush and then flicking it over the stones you can picture the damage!

So far reaction has been shift – the local police spent 2hrs looking round for the can (did not find it though) and taking samples to take around nearby paint shops. The police socco lady was on scene with an hour of me arriving and has also taken samples. Both BBC and Central news have covered the item and local press. A joint EH & Rollright Trust Press Release will be issued tomorrow.

EH area monument inspector has been out and will be returning tomorrow with experts who cleaned up the Avebury paint damage as will the team who have been studying the lichen colonies. EH rep was as incensed as the rest of us and promised that if anyone is caught this will be taken to the full extent of the law. The cost of clean-up and repair will not be available til tomorrow but IMO given that the damage at Avebury did not leave much change out of 100k I reckon at least twice that amount. Paint is also deep inside the holes in the stones.

Damage was most likely done between 8am and 9.45 this morning going be the fact that the paint was still wet and this had to be done in daylight to get most of the paint on target instead of everywhere.

The Police did mention that letting the cost of clean-up being made public would help in getting someone to finger the culprits – who must have been splattered themselves. A reward would also help – to that end I’m currently thinking of who to ask to put up some cash or thinking of asking for pledges to set up a reward fund that would only be called in if someone is prosecuted.

I’m off for a long lie-down, I’m frozen solid after doing my bit for the Karmic wheel in the middle of a freezing cold windy circle dressed inappropriately!

Thanks to everyone for the messages of shared anger and support – hopefully the BBC local news will get over the point that this is not just vandalism but very upsetting to those who regard these places as spiritual too.

Karin – still gutted..

March 30, 2004

Kist Unearthed While Ploughing in Orkney

An Orcadian farmer has unearthed on his land at Howe Farm in Harray (Orkney, Scotland) what is believed to be a Bronze Age burial kist. Despite kists being quite common in Orkney, Historic Scotland called in AOC Archaeology from Edinburgh to carry out the excavation at the end of last week.

AOC project officer Ronan Toolis said: “The machinery went over the kist and broke through the top slab. It was reported to Historic Scotland and they called us in.” Ronan and project supervisor Martin Cook travelled to Orkney on Friday and found a stone kist grave, in effect a stone box. “It is actually very well constructed and inside was a small deposit of cremated bone. We would expect it to be human, although it is still to be analysed,” Ronan said. He continued: “The bone was in a small pile, it may have originally been in a bag that has since rotted away.”

The kist measures about 1.5 metres long, by 60cm wide and was 70cm below the ground surface. Samples have been taken from the kist and surrounding area in a bid to date the burial. The bone material will also be assessed to see how many individuals were buried, their age, sex and health. “We suspect the grave could be Bronze Age as we found a bit of melted metal within the kist,” Ronan said. The grave has been taken apart by the excavators and recorded.

Source: The Orcadian (18 March 2004)

Cave Art to Go on Show

The only known Ice Age cave art in Britain is to be revealed to the public for the first time. But the tours, to be held for just two weeks next month, will be the only chance to see the 12,000-year-old carvings at Creswell Crags (Nottinghamshire, England) for some years.

Archaeologists announced their unique discovery at the Crags last summer. The images carved by nomadic Ice Age hunters who sheltered in the caves were the first to be found in Britain. Before then only small carved objects from the period had been found in the UK. Ice Age cave art has previously been found in France and Spain. The Creswell pictures, of animals such as the ibex (a type of goat), wild ox and birds, were found carved into the walls of Church Hole Cave at the heritage site at Welbeck, near Worksop. But they have been kept from public view while they have been studied, and to protect them.

Now the first tours to see the carvings are to be run daily between April 3 and 18. Times will vary and places must be booked in advance. Visitors will be able to see the ancient images, which are high up on the cave wall, by climbing steps to a viewing platform. Brian Chambers, Creswell Crags curator, said: “This really is a chance in a lifetime.”

It is likely to be the only public viewing allowed for two, possibly three years. But other caves will remain open. Public access has been limited owing to health and safety issues. But in the long term, organisers are investigating ways for the public to have more access. Researchers will be given limited access to the site.

Ian Wall, services and operations manager, said: “It is a sensitive archaeological site and we have already had to take special measures such as installing scaffold platforms for people to stand on to look at the art.

The cave tours will cost £5 for adults, £2.50 for children or £12.50 for a family of four. Visitors must be aged above five. The number of people allowed on each of up to four tours a day will be limited to ten for health and safety reasons. Early bookings for cave tours are recommended. Call 01909 720378.

Source: This is Nottingham, Evening Post (26 March 2004)

March 27, 2004

Axe on the beach from 8,500 years ago

Dog-walker Jamie Stevenson took a stroll along the beach – and stumbled across an axe head dating back to the stone age.

Mr Stevenson, a Radio Solent newsreader, said: ‘My dog Woody likes chasing stones when I skim them on the water, and so I just happened to pick it up.

‘It felt different and looked different. It moulded nicely into my hands. When I looked at it more closely I saw that the edges were cut to be sharp.‘

Mr Stevenson took the stone he found on Prinsted Beach to Havant Museum.

It was forwarded to Kay Ainsworth, the keeper of archaeology at Hampshire Museums Service.

She said: ‘This is a very nice example of a flint Mesolithic era axe. The general shape suggests that it was used as an adze – a stone-age carpentry tool.‘

Mr Stevenson said: ‘The museum dated it to around 8,500BC.

The axe head was returned to Mr Stevenson, who plans to keep it safe.

From Portsmouth Today