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Cambridgeshire: Site reveals 6,000-year-old relics

Published on 27 March 2004
RELICS dating back 6,000 years to the Neolithic age are being uncovered by archaeologists working on the site of the Fordham bypass.

A team from Cambridgeshire County Council’s archaeology field unit are carrying out “digs” on the line of the road before the construction workers move in to build the new route.

Aileen Connor, project manager, said the Neolithic finds, close to the existing A142 road behind the massive Turners transport depot, had not been expected.

Trial digs carried out two years ago had indicated the presence of early Iron Age remains from about 2,500 years ago.

The finds have been found in what was probably a dumping ground for flint off-cuts and other rubbish from the nearby settlement.

Roman coins and other more recent remains have also been discovered.

Ms Connor said that the project, currently the largest archaeological investigation in Cambridgeshire, was expected to continue until the end of May.

An exhibition of the finds is due to be staged in the village this summer when work on the £12.5 million road begins.

From Online Cambridgeshire News

Stonehenge Tunnel Could Have Knock-on Effect at Avebury

From the Salisbury Journal and Wiltshire Advertiser, 24 March 2004.

Decisions taken about the Stonehenge tunnel could have a knock-on effect at Avebury, the inquiry heard last week.

Following on from archaeologists’ concerns, expressed to the inquiry last week, that the proposed 2.1km tunnel, costing £200m, would be inadequate, representatives of the Avebury Society believe the existing scheme also overlooks a significant portion of the World Heritage site.

Ewart Holmes, representing the group, which formed in 1994, said: “Our interest in Stonehenge stems from the fact that it is the other half of a World Heritage site, and decisions taken in one half, at Stonehenge, can have a knock-on effect in Avebury.

“We note that the A303 scheme, which is part of the Stonehenge project, was announced in advance of the Stonehenge Management Plan, and fails to acknowledge the overriding primary emphasis of the latter on conservation, and management of the whole site and its archaeology as a cultural landscape.

Mr Holmes said the primary emphasis of the Stonehenge Management Plan included “improving the interpretation and understanding of the whole of the World Heritage site as a cultural landscape to visitors”.

He said: “This is going to be difficult to achieve if the present scheme is to go ahead, as much of the site is divided by the width of the dual carriageways.”

The society also believes the proposals for the visitor centre should be considered now, along with the road project.

Mr Holmes said: “I feel that, by just sticking with the road, as it were, a lot of what we have learned over the past 50 years about good planning, as accepted throughout the world, has really just been put to one side. continues...

'Stone me, its a bronze age grinder'

From the Forres Gazette, 18 March 2004

JUST a few months after neolithic round houses were found on the site of a housing development on the outskirts of Forres, a man living on the other side of town has unearthed more evidence of the area’s historic past.

Retired farmer Alec Mackenzie (76), who lives at Karora, Mill of Grange, with his wife, Margaret, was trying to remove a large tree root from his garden when he struck a big rock.

Little did he know he had uncovered evidence of a Bronze Age settlement and that nine years later it would be on display in a local museum – along with an Iron Age artefact that he found stuck in his garden wall.

He told the “Gazette” how, on moving into the house about nine years ago, he tried to dislodge a large stone which was preventing him from digging up the root in the garden.

“When I finally managed to get it, I found a large flat stone and a smaller rock buried together, ” he said.

The large stone was shaped like a saddle with an indention in the middle, and Mr Mackenzie left it in his garden, using it as an ornamental birdbath, where it has been for the past nine years, alongside the other smaller stone.

“The birds absolutely love it, ” he said.

“It’s just the right shape for them as it fills with water. I thought it was quite an unusual shape and have been meaning to bring it into the museum for ages.”

When he finally did bring the object into the Falconer Museum in Forres, museums officer Anne Bennet said she was extremely excited about what she saw.

“I thought straightaway that this was a saddle quern because it was so easily identifiable, ” said Miss Bennet.

“It is in good condition and dated somewhere between 500BC and 4500BC, so it could be more than 5,000 years old.

“I phoned the regional archaeologist to come and have a look at it.”

Regional archaeologist Ian Shepherd, who is based in Aberdeen, confirmed that the piece was a saddle quern which would have been used for grinding oats into flour, and dated it from the Bronze Age.

“It is not a unique find, but it is very unusual and an important find, ” he said.

This is not the first time that Forres has hit the historical headlines. Last August, architects doing a pre-site survey of a housing development at Grantown Road for Springfield Properties unearthed evidence of round houses dating from about 3000BC.

A further examination of the site uncovered two neolithic round houses, primitive dwellings which housed people and animals, and buildings which the archaeologists thought might be Pictish.

At the time, Mr Shepherd said the area would have to be properly researched and documented before being returned to the developers.

Meanwhile, Mr and Mrs Mackenzie said although they suspected the stone from their garden was “old” they were unaware it would be historically important, but thought it might have been used for grinding flour as the other stone found with it appeared to fit into it.

“I thought the stone I dug up with it was probably used for grinding down the oats on the top of the quern and milling it into flour, but apparently it was just coincidental that the two stones were dug up together, ” said Mr Mackenzie.

Mr Mackenzie has now donated the quern to the Falconer Museum, where it will be on display along with another large flat stone which he dug out of his garden wall two weeks ago.

This time Miss Bennet was able to say that the item was an Iron Age piece and had probably been used as the top half of a rotary quern, which would also have been used for grinding oats into flour. She said this was a more common find, often uncovered throughout Scotland.

“It was stuck in an old rough dyke, ” said Mr Mackenzie.

“My wife didn’t know what it was either but I think you used to put a stick in a hole in this one and spin it to grind the oats.”

“It’s just amazing, ” said Miss Bennet.

“I don’t know what’s going to turn up next, and I have contacted the regional archaeologist again.”

New Resting Place for Grave

Hot on the heels of this: themodernantiquarian.com/post/24862
comes this:
tavistock-today.co.uk/news/newsdetail.cfm?id=74945
Huzzah!

A BRONZE age burial chamber has found a new place of rest after almost two years in limbo.

The 4,000-year-old grave or cist, which weighs well over a tonne, was moved to its new home at the High Moorland Centre in Princetown last week.

The granite slabs that make up the cist were transported by truck from Torquay Museum and lifted into position using a crane.

Its reconstruction is as close to the original as possible, aligned in a south easterly direction and covered by the ancient capstone for protection from Dartmoor?s fiercest weather.

It is the second time the cist has been relocated ? after its discovery on Thornworthy Tor in 1880 it was transported to Torquay Museum and spent the next 120 years embedded in the entrance hall floor.

Having removed the cist during refurbishment two years ago the curators could find no alternative site for it within the museum so offered it to Dartmoor National Park Authority.

They arranged for the grave to be reconstructed in the Jack Wigmore garden at the High Moorland Centre where it is now on permanent public display.

The cist will soon be accompanied by an information point describing its fascinating and eventful history.

Copyright: Tindle Newspapers Ltd 18 March 04

Talks on Future of Historic Site

Lip service?
A new group has been set up to look at the future of one of Britain’s most important archaeological areas. Thornborough Henges near Ripon in North Yorkshire is a concentration of late Neolithic and Bronze Age sites.

But there are fears it could be under threat if an application is made to extend sand and gravel quarrying.

Now the county council has set up a consultation group including local people and representatives of English Heritage and English Nature.

The members will meet about every six weeks to exchange information and views on the future of the henges.

County Councillor Peter Sowray, who chairs the group, said: “The county council recognises the importance of Thornborough Henges both locally and nationally.

“The group has been set up to reflect the county council’s role in dealing with the henges.

“Further mineral working would have major implications not only for the henges and surrounding archaeological landscape but also in terms of the impact on local communities at Thornbrough and Nosterfield.”

In October 2003, North Yorkshire County Council was criticised by Dr Mark Horton from the University of Bristol for not doing enough to protect the site against damage from quarrying.

Construction company Tarmac currently extracts more than 500,000 tonnes of sand and gravel each year from Nosterfield Quarry.

Tarmac says nothing it is planning would damage the henges.

Story from BBCi, 02/03/04
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/north_yorkshire/3524055.stm

Ancient Stone Tomb Returns to Dartmoor

Hoorah! A ‘good news’ story for once!

A 4,000 year old grave discovered in Chagford in 1879 is returning to Dartmoor.

The prehistoric grave will be relocated to the High Moorland Centre in Princetown early next month from Torquay Museum where it has been for 120 years. Torquay Natural History Society has loaned the grave to Dartmoor National Park Authority for an initial period of five years because it no longer has room for it at the museum.

It is one of two graves or cists (from the Germanic word kistvaen, literally meaning stone chest) which were discovered during the excavation of a prehistoric burial mound near Thornworthy Tor, Chagford in 1879. Burial cists date to the earlier part of the second millennium BC and consist of slabs of granite set on edge to form a box-like structure with another slab laid horizontally as a lid. They were usually sunk into the ground and covered with earth or stones, forming a mound and would have contained either a single burial or a cremation.

The first cist discovered at Thornworthy was excavated by Samuel Slade of Torquay, who decided to seek the help of William Pengelly, the Torquay geologist, in excavating the second cist at the site. By the time Pengelly reached the site the second cist had been looted and all that remained were pottery fragments and flint tools.

Robert Standerwick, the landowner, donated the second cist to Torquay Museum which Pengelly had been instrumental in founding in 1845. It was reconstructed in its original form on the museum floor and will be moved and resited by Dartmoor National Park Authority’s Conservation Team.

Communications officer for Dartmoor National Park Authority, Mike Nendick, said the cist would be rebuilt and installed in the Jack Wigmore garden, exactly as it was in the museum floor in 1880.

‘It consists of five blocks of stone, which weigh a quarter of a tonne each,’ he said.

‘The garden has been redeveloped to represent some of the natural and cultural aspects of the Dartmoor landscape, which is one of the most important areas in Northern Europe for Bronze Age archaeology. It is the perfect spot to have the cist, which will be an excellent addition to the centre — and it will be seen from the inside as well as the outside.‘

Copyright Tindle Newspapers Ltd, 26 February 2004

Stonehenge road inquiry – LOTS of links to news reports in one convenient post

All news filed 17 Feb 2004
From itv.com: itv.com/news/764237.html
From ananova.com: ananova.com/news/story/sm_866864.html?menu=
From ‘The Independent’: news.independent.co.uk/uk/environment/story.jsp?story=492143
From ‘Leisure Opportunities’: leisureopportunities.co.uk/newsdetail.cfm?codeID=7002
From ‘Country Life’: countrylife.co.uk/countrysideconcerns/news/stonehengeenquiry.php
From ‘The Guardian’: guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1150112,00.html
From Aunty Beeb: news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/wiltshire/3489985.stm
Two pieces from The Telegraph: news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&xml=/news/2004/02/18/nhenge18.xml and telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/02/17/ustone.xml&sSheet=/portal/2004/02/17/ixportaltop.html

Protesters Dig in to Save Landscape from Quarry: 'It'll cost millions to get us out'

by John Vidal, environment editor of The Grauniad
14 February 2004

One of Britain’s most historic landscapes is about to become the scene of a passionate encounter between conservationists, local communities and industry as protesters start to flock to a small valley in the Peak District national park.

At stake are the long abandoned Endcliffe and Lees Cross quarries at Stanton Lees in Derbyshire. Overgrown with ash, birch and beech trees on steeply sloping land leading up to the bronze age Nine Sisters stone circle ancient monument on the moor above, they have been worked for many centuries on a small scale to provide local stone. But they are about to be massively expanded to provide 3.2m tonnes of some of the most sought-after sandstone in Britain.

Before work can start, however, a battle of the intensity of the road protests at Twyford Down and Newbury in the 1990s looks inevitable. The 32-acre site has been occupied for four years by protesters who have already built more than 25 tree houses and dug a com plex of deep tunnels and defences in stone cavities. After a high court case last week, which gave the Stancliffe Stone company permission to evict them, they expect hundreds of people to join them. ...continues here...

Ancient Stone Circle Has Made Us Ill, Say Ghost Detectives

Report filed Feb 11 2004 by Robin Turner, The Western Mail

A pair of psychic investigators looking at the healing properties of an ancient stone circle claim it has made them seriously ill.

Brian Perinton and mother-of-two Claire Williams visited Carn Llechart stone circle in the Swansea Valley three months ago. They planned to investigate the healing properties and positive energy which standing in the centre of circle, said to have been constructed in around 2,000BC, was reputed to give to people.

Mr Perinton said yesterday, “I have never seen anything like it. Claire was bodily thrown from the centre of the circle by some kind of force. I felt it too. It was like being punched in the stomach.”

“Since our visit we suffered severe headaches, stomach problems, lethargy and general illness. It was almost as if our energy was completely sapped by whatever was in the centre of those stones.”

“We are starting to recover now but we want to find out if anyone else has had similar experiences. We would love to speak to them to find out if the illnesses and general feeling of weakness are the same.”

“Then we can start some kind of scientific investigation into what could be causing this.”

Mr Perinton, 65, and Ms Williams, 32, run a ghost detective agency in Swansea and have been called to offices, houses and other buildings in which owners or occupants claim to be troubled by spirits or apparitions.

In a recent mission they helped a pub in Neath to rid itself of an angry spirit, said to have been the ghost of a former regular who did not want to leave.

Carn Llechart stone circle, high above Pontardawe, is said to be one of the finest examples of a stone ring cairn or burial chamber in Wales.

The unusual circle is 40ft across and consists of 25 stones leaning slightly outwards giving a crown of thorns effect.

No one is entirely certain why the stone circles were created but they are a Celtic phenomenon. Archaeologists believe they could be giant calendars with stone shadows tracing the alignment of the moon and sun.

It could be the stones are tributes to the dead buried in the circle and some have even speculated they could be used to harness the energy of ley lines, thought to be lines of magnetic energy running across the earth.

Professor Clive Ruggles, of the University of Leicester, says great care is needed in interpreting them.

He said, “Just because a monument is aligned in a certain direction we might be tempted to interpret it as astronomically significant.”

“But the Bronze Age people were not astronomers as we know the term today. However, celestial cycles and objects were extremely important to them.”

Certain circular tombs in Britain have been found to point towards the rising sun and winter solstices.

Many believe stone circles have magic or healing powers, so much so that English Heritage was forced many years ago to fence off the country’s best known stone circle, Stonehenge.

Scientists have carried out experiments at a variety of stone circles finding that the huge rocks tend to generate their own weak magnetic fields. But whether these can combine at certain times of the year as some pagans claim, so as to concentrate energy at a central point, has never been proved.

Mr Perinton said, “We would like anyone who has had a similar experience to contact our agency so we can build up a picture of what is happening.”

The agency’s number is 01792 417693.

New Discoveries at Corfe Castle

by Paula Tegerdine of ‘This is Purbeck’ online
Wednesday 04 February 2004

Quietly hidden among the rolling hills of Purbeck is a unique and important archaeological landscape.

A report just published by English Heritage reveals the extent of earthworks, medieval field patterns and trackways at Corfe Common, near Corfe Castle.

The area has attracted the interest of antiquarians for centuries because of its eight Bronze Age barrows (burial mounds).

English Heritage’s latest research has revealed another two barrows on East Common and identified other features showing how the land has been used for farming over the centuries.

An impressive prehistoric or Romano-British field system known as `Celtic fields’ were identified on the southern flank of the common. Read on here...

Monumental Battle

by Richard Sadler of The Guardian
Wednesday February 4, 2004

A public inquiry into plans for a dual carriageway under Stonehenge will stoke the fierce debate on how best to protect a site on a par with the Taj Mahal and the pyramids.

Six years ago, when the new Labour government was seeking to justify spending £758m on the Millennium Dome, ministers were finalising plans involving another national monument, but it, unlike the dome, had been built to last – about five millennia at the last count.

Stonehenge, one of the world’s most famous landmarks and Europe’s most sensitive archaeological site, is on a par with the Taj Mahal and the Pyramid Fields of Giza on the UN’s list of world heritage sites. But the prehistoric monument was due for a makeover – at least, that is how the plans were sold by the government. Complete story here....

Panamanian Jungle Rock Carving Discovery

An ancient rock covered in carved symbols has been discovered in a South American jungle by an archaeologist from Cornwall.

Julien Chenoweth, from St Mawes, said a date test showed the carvings were as old as ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs.
Whole story here at BBCi

Bronze Age Axe Head 'Too Heavy' Theory

A Bronze Age axe head unearthed in a Lincolnshire field is baffling archaeologists – because they think it is too heavy to use.

Made of stone, the axe head weighs 4.4lb and was produced some time between 2000BC and 1600BC. It was found when a walker stumbled across it last summer in a farmer’s field near Scotter, north of Gainsborough.

Once the axe head was cleaned it was reported to the Portable Antiquities Scheme – a project run by North Lincolnshire Council which records artefacts found by the public.

The artefact is a traditional axe shape and features a hole through the middle where a stick would have been placed as a handle. Archaeologists often refer to these items as axe hammers.

But principal keeper of archaeology Kevin Leahy (57) said the artefact would have been hard to use. Continues here...

Badgers Blamed for Trashing Ancient Sites

From ‘The Grauniad’, January 2004

The secrets of how the ancient ancestors of modern Britons lived and died could be lost forever because the evidence is being destroyed by badgers.

Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire has harboured the mysteries of civilisations for more than 5,500 years, making it one of Europe’s most treasured archaeological sites.

Just beneath the surface are the remains of Bronze Age burials, Iron Age enclosures, Roman villages, Saxon and Medieval settlements and the Second World War.

Yet a fast growing population of badgers, attracted to easy digging conditions, is building networks of tunnels that threaten to wreck Britain’s historical treasure trove.
Read whole story here

Scottish Carved Stones Could be Safeguarded

Carving out a safe future for nation’s most precious stones by Stephen Stewart of ‘The Herald’, December 22 2003

ONE of Scotland’s most valuable historic resources could be safeguarded for future generations by a consultation document published today.

Carved stones, from prehistoric rock art to gravestones, will be the focus of a three-month investigation involving owners, local authorities, special interest groups and the wider public.
Frank McAveety, minister for tourism, culture and sport, launched the consultation, due to finish at the end of March, which is designed to protect carved stones such as the Pictish cross-slabs at Glamis, Aberlemno and Eassie.

Other significant carved stones include the eagle from the Broch of Burrian in Orkney and the boar on the roadside stone at Knocknagael, near Inverness.

Whole story here

Protest at Boyne Battle Site

From BBCi, 22 Dec 2003
A cross-border heritage group has been protesting against plans to build a rubbish incinerator near the site of Newgrange and the Battle of the Boyne in County Louth.

The demonstrators called on the Irish Government to stop what they described as “cultural vandalism”.

Whole story here

Restoration of Historic Site on Dartmoor

Volunteers from Tavistock Conservation Project have been helping to restore the setting of an ancient Scheduled Monument on Dartmoor, almost totally obscured by vegetation.

The Pound at Deeper Marsh on Spitchwick Common, an earthwork enclosure and ditch, was covered by thick scrub and gorse bushes until the volunteers, under close supervision by archaeologists, cleared the area.

A survey is now planned of the site to discover its original function. Over the years it has been described as a Neolithic henge, a Bronze Age burial mound or an Iron Age hill slope enclosure.

It is thought the Iron Age suggestion is most likely, as it would tie in other sites in the area. This would date the pound between 700BC and 43AD.

Other conservation measures to archaeological sites on Dartmoor have also been carried out recently by Dartmoor National Park Authority.

They include repairs to the Yellowmead stone circle and row on Cosdon Hill and damage to the Langstone Moor stone circle on Merrivale firing range, where visitors to the site have built two crude stone walls between the stones.

A DNPA spokesman said: ‘The material used in the construction was derived from inside the circle and consists of the shattered remains of former standing stones, destroyed by American military during the second world war.‘

(c)Tindle Newspapers Ltd 18 December 03

from the Tavistock Times Gazette

Kentish Metal Detectorists Unearth Treasure

In two separate incidents metal detectorists working in Kent have unearthed fascinating hoards of prehistoric coins, axe heads and jewellery.

A number of weeks ago two metal detectorists found an Iron Age hoard on farmland near Maidstone and last Sunday another detectorist dug up a Bronze Age hoard near Wye.
Whole story here

Log Boat Unearthed

A second prehistoric log boat has been unearthed in a Derbyshire quarry less than a mile from where a similar find was discovered five years ago.

Archaeologists found the 3,500-year-old log boat, which dates back to the Bronze Age, at Shardlow Quarry, Shardlow, in an area that used to be river channel into the Trent.

The boat lay 1km away from the area where a similar boat, now on display at Derby Museum and Art Gallery, the Strand, was found in 1998.

University of Birmingham archaeologists made the discovery in September while carrying out a study on behalf of the quarry’s owners, Hanson Aggregates, but news of the find has just been revealed.
More here at ‘This is Derbyshire‘

Ancient Axe In 'Buried Treasure' Exhibition

The oldest man-made object found in Britain has been unearthed in Norfolk, offering dramatic new evidence that the history of mankind in northwest Europe began up to 200,000 years earlier than previously thought.

A stone axe unearthed along the coast by a man walking his dog is thought to date from 700,000 years ago. Experts at the British Museum say that it could revolutionise our understanding of our ancient origins. While further research is now taking place at the Norfolk site, the axe is to be displayed next week at the British Museum, in an ambitious exhibition on British archaeology.
Whole story here from The Times Online

Ancient Scots Link To Stonehenge

‘Ancient Scots may have enjoyed sophisticated economic, social and cultural links with the builders of one of the world’s most mysterious ancient monuments, according to new research.

Experts have revealed a previously unknown link between the elite of ancient Scots society and Stonehenge, dispelling the myth that Scotland’s Bronze Age tribes were uncultivated barbarians.’ says STEPHEN STEWART of ‘The Herald‘

Read whole story here

(Another) Archaeological Site At Risk

One of Britain’s most important archaeological finds is under threat – from North Yorkshire potato farmers.

Scientists have discovered a vast area of buried buildings and villages spanning 6,000 years, under fields at West Heslerton, near Malton in North Yorkshire.

Read whole story here...

Acoustic Archaeology – the new rock ’n roll

Mark Pilkington in The Guardian
Thursday November 6, 2003

Were some ancient sites designed to be acoustically, as well as visually, awe-inspiring?

Ongoing research at Neolithic sites around the UK has revealed striking similarities in their acoustical properties. Key examples, both in Ireland, are the huge passage tomb of Newgrange and the burial mound known as Cairn L at Loughcrew. These sites contain passageways leading to large circular chambers, and have a resonant frequency (at which sounds naturally echo and reverberate) of about 110hz – the frequency of the male baritone, the second lowest singing voice. Standing waves, whereby sounds are reflected off walls and superimposed on to one another, and other acoustic curiosities, have been observed in these and other sites. Stone circles including Avebury and Stonehenge also appear to reflect sound in distinctive ways.

Archaeologists have suggested that chanting, singing and drumming at these sites would have produced reverberating echoes that might have been interpreted as voices of spirits or gods; they may also have induced physiological and psychological changes in people, adding to their potency as sites of spiritual importance.

These acoustic discoveries may also shed light on some of the visual motifs etched into the walls of many ancient sites. Experiments in a replica of the Newgrange passage, at Princeton University, showed that if a site was smoky or misty, standing sound waves would become visible as they vibrated particles in the air. Could this visualising effect account for the zigzag and concentric ring markings on the chamber walls?

Intriguing acoustic effects have also been noted at sites in the Americas, from Anasazi kivas (ritual chambers) in New Mexico, to Chichen Itza on Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula. Here, the famed Mayan pyramid of Kukulcan, or Quetzelcoatl, is known for the way the solstices and equinoxes are reflected in its stones, but professional acoustician David Lubman has observed another aspect to its design. If you clap in front of the pyramid, the sound is reflected back by its stone steps, sounding, Lubman claims, like the chirp of the quetzal bird, sacred to the Mayans.

Acoustic archaeology is a young field finally gaining academic respectability. New discoveries are made constantly, so next time you’re at an ancient site, sing, clap your hands – and listen carefully.

Was Orkney The Ceremonial Capital Of Ancient Britain?

Orkney may have been the largest prehistoric settlement or ceremonial site in Britain, new research reveals today.

Archaeologists using the latest techniques to map under the soil discovered the world heritage site covering the Ness of Brodgar in Stenness, was a massive centre of activity in Stone Age times.
Orkney’s landscape has largely managed to avoid the rigours of industrialised farming and may yet yield its secrets about the recently-surveyed site, which in terms of scale, puts the likes of Stonehenge, Avebury and Skara Brae in the shade.

Whole article here....

Oetzi’s home village pinpointed

By Helen Briggs, BBC News Online

Scientists have pinpointed the likely birthplace of Oetzi the famous Iceman.
The ancient hunter probably spent his childhood in what is now the Italian South Tyrol village of Feldthurns.

Evidence suggests his lifelong travels were confined to a 60-kilometre (37-mile) range south-east of where his body was found.

The 5,300-year-old frozen mummy emerged from a melting glacier along the mountainous border between Italy and Austria in 1991.

Scientists have been carrying out detailed studies of how he lived and died ever since.

The latest research, published in the journal Science, looked at isotopes found in the Iceman’s teeth and bones. Whole story here...

Archaeologists Battle To Save Galloway Site

Archaeologists are engaged in a race to save the remnants of an Iron Age settlement built by one of the most mysterious early peoples of Scotland.

The prehistoric site at Carghidown, near the Isle of Whithorn, Galloway, could illuminate the lives of an ancient tribe called the Novantae.

However, the promontory fort located 100ft above the sea, which has a number of extremely rare features, faces destruction after years of wave and wind action and could collapse into the sea... Whole story here.

Sky-religion in the Bronze Age discussed on TV

A lecturer will be explaining the history of a sacred calendar – that could be Germany’s equivalent to Stonehenge – on the BBC’s Horizon programme in January

Professor Miranda Aldhouse-Green, a senior lecturer at the University of Wales College, Newport has been filmed discussing a Bronze Age sky-disc, which features in early man’s attempts to map the heavens.

Prof Aldhouse-Green, a European prehistorian specialising in the archaeology of ritual and religion, was filmed for the popular Horizon TV series.

“They spent a day interviewing me about the significance of an ancient sky-disc, dating from around 1600BC, which may have been used by priests as a sacred calendar,” explained Prof Aldhouse- Green.

Full story here

Human sacrifices at the Clumps?

Archaeologists are investigating whether Wittenham Clumps was a centre for human sacrifice – after the chopped-up remains of a woman were found in a grave at Castle Hill.

The skeletal remains of the women were part of a remarkable discovery by archaeologists of a shared grave containing skeletons of a child and a man.
Read whole story here

Dig Unearths Evidence Of A Bronze Age Settlement

Dig unearths ancient mine and Roman road
Last posted: Friday 10 October 2003 12:10
ARCHAEOLOGISTS have unearthed evidence of a Roman road and Bronze Age settlement at a multi-million pound business and leisure park development.

The dig at the 300-acre Gibfield Park site in Atherton has revealed fragmentary remains of the badly damaged road, which linked Roman forts at Manchester and Wigan.

A 10-strong team of archaeologists from Manchester University spent the summer excavating the former site of Gadbury Fold, off Atherleigh Way. Their survey also revealed that mining had been carried out on the site since at least the 14th century.

Whole story here

New Road Reveals Stone Age Site

From BBCi

Archaeologists believe they may have stumbled upon a major Stone Age site – on the route of a new bypass.

The site dates back between 250,000 and 300,000 years and may even provide evidence of one of the earliest uses of fire.

Archaeologists discovered a range of items at the location in Harnham, near Salisbury in Wiltshire, including 44 “very rare” flint hand axes – the earliest form of tool used by man.

Whole story here

Prehistoric Maltese Mystery Solved?

Posted in anticipation of The Megalithic European!

The mystery of a prehistoric site cited as, variously, a launch site for little green men or the tracks leading to Atlantis, could be finally solved.
Known as the Maltese Clapham Junction, the expanse of scrubby fields and barren rock is a bewilder ing complex of tracks believed to be up to 6,000 years old, gouged into solid limestone of the island whose megalithic temples are the oldest stone buildings in the world.
Now an Australian archaeologist, inspired by the evidence of the Aran Islands off the west coast of Ireland, has demolished both the myths and the con ventional explanations. Claudia Sagona, from Birmingham University, suggests the site may be simply a relic of stone age agricultural enterprise. Whole story here...

'Ferrari of the Iron Age' found

Chariot proves Iron Age links with Europe
by STEPHEN STEWART, September 25 2003

ARCHAEOLOGISTS studying an ancient chariot burial have found evidence that Iron Age Scots had far closer ties with Europe than previously thought.
Experts examining the unprecedented find at Newbridge, west of Edinburgh, have proved it is the oldest chariot in the UK and uncovered great similarities between the vehicle and associated burial rites found on the Continent, indicating a close familiarity with mainland European practices. Whole story here

Axe Head Found

The landscape around Stonehenge and Avebury has yielded more of its secrets during a new investigation. Archaeologists have spent the last three weeks walking 90 hectares (222 acres) of private land around the monuments to look for prehistoric flint.

A polished stone axe head from the Neolithic period, dating to around 3,000BC-2,500BC, and a leaf shaped arrowhead from the same period have been found near Stonehenge. This type of axe, which usually had a wooden shaft, would have been used to cut down trees, though this axe head has not been used. The stone it was made from is not local.
Read Wessex Archaeology’s press release

Read 24 Hour museum’s story

Leave the axes where they are

from BBCi
Plea to walkers over relics

A Cumbrian museum has urged hill walkers to leave Neolithic relics where they find them on the fells. Stone axes are often found on Lake District scree slopes, and the Tullie House Museum in Carlisle is showing people how to recognise them, enjoy them but not to take them home.
Whole story here

Crack Fears for Skara Brae Stones

From BBCi
An investigation has been launched into concerns that increased visitor numbers may be damaging the Stone Age village of Skara Brae on Orkney.
The heritage agency, Historic Scotland, has brought in state-of-the-art technology to determine whether stones are moving or developing cracks.
Read full article

US Author Bill Bryson appointed EH commissioner

He comes from Des Moines, Iowa. Somebody had to. You can’t blame him for wanting to be here.

Mr Bryson has been a resident of the country, on and off, for the past two decades. He said: “I am taking this very seriously and I am honoured to be appointed. It’s not every day that an immigrant more or less fresh off the boat gets invited to help run a national institution.”

Read whole story here

Deadline for draft Stonehenge plan

From BBCi, 4 September 2003
Next Thursday is the deadline for people to express their views over a proposed £193m road development around Stonehenge. It is hoped that the re-routing of the A303 road, and a £57m visitor centre, will rescue the World Heritage site from its label as “a national disgrace”.
Read whole story here....

Farmers in Northern Ireland encouraged to preserve heritage

from Farming Life, 3-9-03

Northern Ireland is well known for the diversity of its landscape features, particularly the many archaeological sites which are scattered throughout the countryside.

Examples of the many different types of site include standing stones, stone circles, raths, forts and underground souterrains (tunnels).

However, many important sites have been lost or damaged over the years.

Protection of these unique landscape features is paramount as they not only preserve a visible link with the past, but also contain a wealth of information about the way of life of our ancestors.

These sites can be safeguarded under the Environmentally Sensitive Areas (ESA) Scheme and the Countryside Management Scheme (CMS).

In these schemes, the farmer receives an annual payment for the positive management of an archaeological feature.

Read whole story here....

Experts Voice Fears Over Gravel Extraction At Unique Henge Site

Do I detect the hand of our very our BrigantesNation at work here?!

From www.24hour museum.org.uk
Archaeologists and local campaigners have expressed their concern at the possibility of further gravel extraction close to the Neolithic complex of henges at Thornborough in Yorkshire.

What a great news story!

Family Return From a Week of Bronze Age Living

A time-travelling family is back in the 21st century this week . . . after going back to the Bronze Age!

For the Pogmores are now enjoying the luxuries of modern life after taking part in a reality TV programme on ITV’s Central News. As revealed last month, dad Phil (38), mum Vickie (35) and six of their seven children had to face life without coffee, chocolate and mobile phones for the week, filmed at archaeological site Flag Fen in Peterborough. But after returning back to a normal family life again, dad Phil reckoned life back in 3000BC wasn’t all that bad.
“I’d go back like a shot. I loved it,” he said. “There were no telephones, TVs or computer games, no hustle and bustle . . . it was great.”
...story continues here...

Heritage Body May Have to Slash Visitor Numbers to Skara Brae

By Ian Johnston of the Scotsman:

The number of visitors to Skara Brae on Orkney – one of the world’s leading Stone Age attractions – may have to be cut amid fears they are damaging the monument, Historic Scotland has admitted.

The heritage agency has launched an investigation to discover whether the thousands of people who visit the ancient village each year are causing serious damage to the walls of the unique dwellings.

Every year up to 55,000 tourists explore the site, which dates back to 3200BC, but numbers may now have to be limited to help preserve the buildings.

A chambered burial cairn known as Maeshowe is also being examined for potential damage as part of the study.

Skip yard could drain river and ruin Bronze Age site

A proposed skip yard near Waddon Ponds could drain the River Wandle and destroy the remains of a Bronze Age settlement, a local historian has warned.

Plans to house the storage site on derelict land on the corner of Croydon Road and the Purley Way have outraged local residents and environmentalists.

Their case was strengthened this week by local historian Raymond Hague, who said the yard would devastate the local ecology and destroy an area of archaeological value.

He warned that building work could disrupt or drain the Wandle and cause environmental damage to the Waddon Ponds beauty spot...

...read whole story here.

Rock art discovered in East Anglia

A holiday-maker has stumbled upon elaborate carvings believed to date back to the Bronze Age on a large granite stone at Gorleston beach.

The man spotted the markings, which were gouged deep into a rock used as part of the sea defence to protect the promenade and sea wall, and reported his findings to the Norfolk Archaeological Unit.

Archaeological enthusiasts from the unit visited Gorleston beach to carry out further analysis of the stone carvings and were extremely excited by the revelation....

...read the whole story here.

'Incredible' Bronze Age finds in Ulster

From the mid-Ulster Mail, 21 August 2003ce

WHILE 20 diggers and dump trucks shifted soil on a 35-acre site at Loughry near Cookstown on Friday they couldn’t drown out the noise of a trowel scraping.
As bulldozers prepared the ground for the new £1.9m Mid-Ulster Sport Academy at Tullywiggan Road, a team of archaeologists – with more modest shovels – were delving deep into Mid-Ulster’s past on the edge of the site.
Sports fans may be excited at the prospect of the new complex but their enthusiasm is surpassed by the archaeologist heading up the Loughry dig – Galway man Robert Chapple.
Mr Chapple, site director of excavations for Northern Archaeological Consultancy, said that the amount of material uncovered is “phenomenal”.
There are two sites being investigated and Mr Chapple said he was hoping that one of these – to the north – could turn out to show evidence of a Bronze Age (2000-1500BC) house. The more southerly site is giving an amazing insight into the burial customs of our ancestors.

Read whole article here...

Iron Age coin-die found in Hants

An ancient British , used to stamp a horse design on Iron Age gold coins, has been found near Alton in Hampshire.

A member of the public handed it in at the Curtis Museum where it caused huge excitement, with curator, Tony Cross, describing it as “the most significant find in Alton since the discovery of the Alton Buckle some 40 years ago”.

So rare is the die that the British Museum has only ever seen one before.

Reda the whole story here!

The Megalithic Yard

In the mid 17th century the architect Inigo Jones was instructed to survey Stonehenge. He declared the ruins too sophisticated to have been built by the barbaric Druids and proposed a Roman origin.

Almost a century later, the antiquarian William Stukeley overturned Jones’ theory, noting the site’s ancient age and astronomical alignments. Stukeley also suggested the ruins shared a uniform system of measurement. Whoever they were, our ancient monument builders were no barbarians.

Read on here

Family go back to Bronze Age

Six members of the Pogmore family are spending a week living in a Bronze Age roundhouse.

The experiment, organised by Carlton Television, is taking place at the Flag Fen Bronze Age visitor’s centre.

The Pogmores are dad Phil (38), mum Vickie (35), Keeley (19), Gavin (17), Phil (15), Claire (14), and 12-year-old twins Steven and Brendan.

They are living and sleeping in a roundhouse typical of the age.

Read more here...