
The two outliers of the Nine Barrows.....

To the right the last barrow of the seven on the hill, in front two Priddy barrows making the 9 barrows and then in the background the Ashill line of barrows.
The National Trust is getting ambitious this year ......
The National Trust is getting into the outdoor festival spirit this summer with a chill out bar and a project to illuminate Glastonbury Tor during the Glastonbury Festival Weekend.
Festival goers may have spotted the Tor above Glastonbury in the past, but this year the landmark will be unmissable as St Michael’s Tower, which is perched on the top of the iconic ancient monument, will be bathed in light for the first time.
The Tor will be illuminated each night between sunset and sunrise during the five days of the world famous music festival, which is also celebrating its 40th anniversary in 2010. The lights will go on at 9.31pm British Summer Time each evening, the exact time of sunset.
“It’s the first time that the Trust will be at Glastonbury Festival, and we wanted to do something special to mark the important role that the Festival plays in Somerset life and to celebrate its 40th birthday,” said Andy Mayled, National Trust General Manager for the Somerset Countryside.
Much like the light shows on the Festival’s famous Pryamid stage, the latest LED technology will be used to light up the Tor in a variety of coloured light. The special lighting will however use a much smaller amount of energy – less than a third of the power of kettle – and give off less light pollution than conventional spotlights.
Warming to the festival theme, the National Trust will also be running the Outside Inn this year. Offering an escape from the crowds and thumping bass, the “fresh air bar” and chill out zone will feature soft pebbles and meadow grass to cushion people as they lie back with silent disco headphones playing the sounds of the outdoors.
“The National Trust’s heart beats to the rhythm of the natural world, and we’ve tried to capture this in the Outside Inn where you can get refreshment for the mind and soul,” added Mayled.
More information on the National Trust and the Glastonbury Festival (June 23-27) is available at: www.nationaltrust.org.uk/Glastonbury
culture24.org.uk/history+%2526+heritage/archaeology/art79460
“Meath which opens today. Protests are expected from a range of environmentalists and heritage activists, including the campaign group Tarawatch who complained the route of the motorway is unacceptably close to the Hill of Tara.”
ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE: THE M3 motorway which cost an estimated €1 billion will be officially opened today.
The 61km motorway linking the Dublin/Meath border with the Meath/Cavan border is believed to be the largest single road project to be constructed in Ireland and incorporates bypasses of Dunshaughlin, Navan and Kells.
In addition to the motorway itself, the overall project involves a network of 49km of ancillary public roads and 34km of farm access roads.
Private security and a large contingent of gardaí will be in place for the opening ceremony, which is to take place near Kells, Co Meath, at 11am.
Protests are expected from a range of environmentalists and heritage activists, including the campaign group Tarawatch who complained the route of the motorway is damaging to the area and passes unacceptably close to the Hill of Tara.
The National Roads Authority (NRA) said anyone who feared the impact of the motorway on the Hill of Tara, the historic seat of the ancient high kings, should “assess it for themselves” over the bank holiday weekend or in the coming weeks.
“The weekend is a perfect opportunity for those who are concerned to get out and see what the fuss was all about,” said a spokesman.
It is also the latest of the State’s new motorways to be tolled. Motorists will face two tolls, at Clonee and Kells, under a public-private partnership between the State and a consortium involving civil engineering companies Ferrovial, Siac and Budimex.
Tolls will be set at €1.30 each, fixed in line with inflation. Despite assertions to the contrary from Tarawatch, the roads authority has insisted it is confident vehicle targets will be met in the first year of operation.
Following the completion of the major inter-urban motorways to Limerick and Waterford this October, all of the motorways between Dublin and the regional cities, as well as the Border, will feature tolls.
The roads authority said yesterday that private finance is likely to be involved in a greater share of its projects in coming years.
Current public-private partnerships in development include the Gort to Tuam motorway in Co Galway; the upgrade of Newlands Cross, Dublin; N11 improvements in Co Wicklow; and the southern section of the M20 Cork to Limerick road.
Construction of the M3 was controversial not only because of its proximity to the Hill of Tara, but also because it was used by the European Commission as an example of non-compliance by Ireland with European planning directives.
In 2007, then EU environment commissioner Stavros Dimas said the commission considered Ireland’s approach to decisions involving the destruction or removal of historic structures and archaeological monuments to be in breach of EU rules.
irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0604/1224271819706.html

Lavender offering on lintel of Stoney Littleton barrow
Not strictly stone news, but the good news that a landscape is being preserved and getting some money as well! Especially after the closing down of the Sweet Track Centre....
Today (Thursday 20th May), the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) has earmarked a first-round pass* of £1,867,900 – including £95,400 development funding – under its Landscape Partnership (LP) programme, for Natural England to progress its plans for the Avalon Marshes Landscape Partnership Project.
The announcement was made by Simon Timms, in his first engagement as newly-appointed chair of Heritage Lottery Fund South West committee.
Working with local communities, partners and visitors, this exciting project will celebrate the outstanding natural and cultural heritage of the area through new heritage conservation, education, interpretation and rural skills training activities.
The Avalon Marshes comprise the low lying land of the Brue Valley which extends from Glastonbury in the east, towards Bridgwater Bay in the West. A nationally and internationally important wetland habitat, it is rich in wildlife and steeped in archaeological heritage. Home to ancient Neolithic trackways, stunning wildflower meadows, and thousands of wintering wildfowl, this landscape has many ancient and modern stories to tell.
The plans that Natural England and partners are seeking HLF support for aim to develop access, interpretation, education, and economic opportunities, with heritage at the heart of supporting a future for rural communities in the Avalon Marshes. Access to the landscape will be improved through new heritage interpretation using modern technology, new boardwalks and hides, and new access routes.
The project aims to revive traditional heritage skills such as thatching, willow weaving and green woodworking and will deliver specialist courses and training, in particular for young people, underprivileged groups and the unemployed.........
naturalengland.org.uk/regions/south_west/press_releases/2010/200510.aspx
The plundering of megalithic tombs by vikings,
“Amlaibh, Imhar and Auisle (Audgisl) three chieftains of the gaill; and Lorcan, son of Cathal, King of Meath, plundered the land of Flann (North Brega).
The cave of Achadh-Aldai (Newgrange); the cave of Cnoghba (Knowth); the cave of the grave of Bodan over Dubadh (Dowth); and the cave of the wife of Gobhan at Drochat-atha (Drogheda) were broken and plundered by these same gaill.”
Taken from the Annals of Ulster
The viking raids on the great megalithic tombs of the Boyne valley in 863; by Olaf (Amlaibh) Ivar (Imhar) and Audgisl, probably carried out because after all the monastic raids that had been undertaken over the previous years, ‘treasure’ was by now getting hard to find.
Is it true you may ask yourself, well it was recorded, and though there is some dispute about Newgrange (according to Gordon), it is a fascinating fact. The book I found this information from goes on to speculate, that one of the ‘gaills’ Ivar might have been the son of Ragnar Lothbrok, who spent three days in Maes Knowe because of a storm raging violently outside, and left the following scrawled on the wall...
This mound was raised before Ragnar Lothbrok’s...
His sons were brave, smooth-hide men though they were...
It was long ago that a great treasure was hidden here...
Happy is he that might find the great treasure...
Be that as it may, I expect there was’nt much treasure in the great tombs of the Boyne valley either.
Information gleaned from ‘The Fury of the Northmen’ by John Marsden.
Four thousand years after our ancestors built a timber circle on what is now Holme Beach, the final part of the monument was this morning lifted into what should be its final resting place.
A small crowd gathered in King’s Lynn Bus Station in the lazy Sunday morning sunshine as the glass front of Lynn Museum was removed and the giant oak stump was painstakingly manoeuvred into its new home.
Museum officials held their breath as the carefully wrapped one and a half tonne stump was gradually rolled off a special van.
The completed Seahenge display will go on show this summer inside a replica of its original setting.
Controversy surrounded the decision to excavate the 4,000-year-old monument after it was discovered late in 1998.
But while the purpose of Seahenge’s central stump remains unknown, scientists studying its ring of timbers have discovered ancient society in Norfolk was far more advanced than had previously been believed.
More than 20,000 visitors a year have been to see the oak posts since they went on show in a new £1.6m gallery at Lynn Museum two years ago.
Before going on display, the Portsmouth-based Mary Rose Trust spent almost a decade preserving the timbers, using similar techniques to those employed to preserve Henry VIII’s warship the Mary Rose. Due to its size, the 8ft high central stump took a further two years to conserve.
Area museums officer Robin Hanley said like the smaller timbers, the stump displayed marks made by individual axes when it was built on the edge of what was originally forest.
“It’s great to see the stump being reunited with the remainder of the timber circle after all these years they’re been apart and great to see the timbers back together in West Norfolk,” said Dr Hanley
“We’ve been extremely pleased with the response to the displays, a lot of people have been inspired by the preservation of the timbers and have enjoyed being able to see them in such detail.
“To be able to get so close to 4,000-year-old timbers and see individual axe marks left by Bronze Age axes is extraordinary.”
Scientists using carbon and tree ring dating estimate Seahenge was built in the spring of 2049BC. It is believed to be the only example of its kind ever found. Its timbers were preserved by peat which encased them beneath the sands until its outline was revealed by a storm.
Dr Hanley said: “It has been a complex military style operation. It was nice to see people here for what is quite a momentous moment.”
Seahenge enthusiast Christine Von Allwoderden, from North Wootton, came into the town to see the stump arrive.
She said: “How exciting it must have been when it was found. I am very interested in the history of it. I do think it’s fantastic for King’s Lynn and fantastic for the museum”
She added that although she thought it was good for King’s Lynn to have the timber circle in the museum, she thought it should still be at Holme.
EDP24; tinyurl.com/y4swt7q
LITTERED across the hills of Dartmoor in Devon, southern England, around 80 rows and circles of stones stand sentinel in the wild landscape. Now, striking similarities between one of these monuments and Stonehenge, 180 kilometres to the east, suggest they may be the work of the same people.
The row of nine stones on Cut Hill was discovered in 2004 on one of the highest, most remote hills of Dartmoor national park. “It is on easily the most spectacular hill on north Dartmoor,” says Andrew Fleming, president of the Devon Archaeological Society. “If you were looking for a distant shrine in the centre of the north moor, that’s where you would put it.”
Ralph Fyfe of the University of Plymouth and independent archaeologist Tom Greeves have now carbon-dated the peat surrounding the stones. This suggests that at least one of the stones had fallen – or been placed flat on the ground – by between 3600 and 3440 BC, and another by 3350 to 3100 BC (Antiquity, vol 84, p 55).
That comes as a surprise to archaeologists, who, on the strength of artefacts found nearby, had assumed that Dartmoor monuments like Cut Hill and Stall Moor (pictured) dated from the Bronze Age, around 2100 to 1600 BC. Instead, Fyfe suggests that Cut Hill is from the Neolithic period, the same period that Stonehenge was built.
Unlike Stonehenge, the 2-metre-tall Cut Hill stones lie flat on the ground, parallel to each other and between 19 metres and 34.5 metres apart, like the sleepers of a giant railway track. Packing stones discovered at the end of one of the megaliths suggest at least one of them stood erect at some point, but the regularity of their current layout makes it likely they were deliberately placed that way, Greeves says.
What’s more, the stones’ alignment with the summer and winter solstices seems identical to that of Stonehenge, Newgrange in Ireland and Maes Howe in Scotland. “It could be coincidence, but it’s striking,” says archaeologist Mike Pitts.
article in Newscientist by Linda Geddes
tinyurl.com/y788obk
p.s. A longer article in British Archaeology May/June says “that there are similar stone rows in form and scale on Bodmin Moor... a similar orientation appears at another exceptional site at Drizzlecombe, where two or three long rows runs for 75-150 m; one ends with one of Dartmoor’s largest standing stone 4.3m.“....
The Landscape and Perception Project on the source of the ‘bluestones’ on the Presceli range.
Remains of a stone row, situated within open moorland on a level terrace below Cerrig Lladron. The three stones are aligned from NNE to SSW, the row measuring 17m in length overall. The row is aligned with the large round cairn on the summit of Cerrig Lladron (PE298), which is about 200m to the SSW. The largest stone measures 2.5m in height, 1.9m in length and 1m in width. Its nearest neighbour, that to the NNE, measures 0.4m in height, while the stone situated to the SSW measures 0.7m in height. A further upright stone is situated immediately to the NE of the largest. It measures 0.6m in height and may have been displaced from the row.
Lost land under the sea.....
It is just eight inches long, but its discovery changed what we know about prehistoric Europe and our ancestors.
The harpoon, which was found by a Lowestoft fishing trawler in 1931, was yesterday under the lens of a Norwegian television crew, who are making a documentary on the origins of Norway.
It is 14,000 years old, but in perfect condition, the points carved into it still sharp. It would have been used for hunting by modern man in late Paleolithic or early Mesolithic times; a time before written records when people lived in hunter-gatherer communities.
But it is where it was found, 25 miles off the coast of Cromer, that makes it important to history. When it was dredged off the sea bed in 1931, hidden inside a lump of peat, it was taken home by Pilgrim Lockwood, the skipper of the fishing boat Colinda. It later ended up in Norwich’s Castle Museum, where it fascinated archaeologists. They thought it might have been dropped by hunters on a fishing expedition. But later tests showed that the freshwater peat it came from would have been on land thousands of years ago. They realised the existence of land in the North Sea, long since drowned, called Doggerland.
The harpoon is now on display in the Museum of Rural Life in Gressenhall, near Dereham, but was being filmed in the study centre at the Castle Museum yesterday.
Its significance to Norwegian history is that it shows how people from south-west Europe could have got to Norway. The theory is that in the last ice age, people from Iberia moved up into Britain, across Doggerland and into Scandinavia.
Producer Ole Egil Strkson said: “This particular object is the first clue that that happened.”
The producers had been hoping to find relatives of Pilgrim Lockwood to tell the story of how he found the harpoon. What is known is that he returned to the site in 1932 to take the peat samples which were used for testing.
The television crew said they felt moved by the age and significance of the deer antler harpoon, known as the Leman and Ower harpoon after the sandbanks where it was found. Presenter Samina Bruket said: “I was allowed to hold it. To think it is 14,000 years old is just amazing. I had seen pictures of it but it is even more beautiful than I thought, it was so shiny and well preserved.”
Mr Storkson said: “It has been carved, so you can see it really has been used by humans.”
Alan West, a curator of archaeology with Norfolk museum service, said: “It was originally part of a pair. The barbs faced each other with a long shaft used to stab down, like the eel spears you see from the 19th century.”
The programme, which will be called Norwegian Roots, is due to be shown in December on the biggest Norwegian television station in prime-time.
The film crew went on to visit Holme-next-the-sea, near Hunstanton, where they filmed peat and remains of tree roots visible at low tide, showing that there was once land which is now covered by sea.
They are also planning to visit Vince Gaffney, of Birmingham University and an expert in Doggerland. He says that: “a very real, human tragedy lies behind the loss of this immense landscape”, and that with global warming and sea levels rising, it has relevance today.
About Doggerland
Doggerland, named after the Dogger Bank sandbank, is thought to have existed between 12,000 and 8,000 years ago.
During the last ice age, much more water was contained in the polar ice caps, and the North Sea included an area of land larger than England and Wales, linking East Anglia with Holland and Belgium, with a much narrower stretch of water cutting off Britain from Norway.
It is thought to have been a land of rivers and marshes, which offered good hunting grounds for people. As the earth warmed and sea levels rose 8,000 years ago, the land was covered by water. Sea levels rose at one or two metres per century, creating a loss of land which would have been noticeable to the residents but not enough to drown them overnight.
Europe’s Lost World – Rediscovery of Doggerland..
britarch.ac.uk/books/Gaffney2009
Although the Kenward stone is considered natural there is another story attributed to it that may give it a prehistoric link. John Chandler has written about it in this Wiltshire Council link....
wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getconcise.php?id=60
which states that the stone had been removed from a field in which other stones lay...
“about 1890, he reported, he had been told by two of Chute’s oldest inhabitants that the stone had been moved there from a field where there were other big stones, some of which had been buried out of the way. But nobody by 1924 could remember where, and so part at least of the pseudo-Kenward stone’s mystery remains.”
THE cyber age’s bid to spread its message into a pristine landscape has perished between a rock and a hard place in a Bronze Age valley.
Age-old archaeological remains are standing in the way of plans to bring modern internet communications to a scenic area of Kerry.
A telecommunications mast which would provide broadband to the mid-Kerry area would be a “new alien intrusion” on a very beautiful and almost pristine landscape.
That’s according to senior An Bord Pleanála inspector, Robert Ryan.
The area around the proposed location for a 12-metre mast at Coomasaharn, Glenbeigh, is “one of the most significant Bronze Age landscapes in the country,” Kerry County Council also conceded.
The local authority noted the Glenbeigh area has the greatest concentration of ancient “rock art” in Ireland, with more than 100 recorded examples.
The Bronze Age dated from around 2200 BC to 500 BC.
Mr Ryan supported the council and upheld a decision to refuse Hutchinson 3G Ireland planning permission for the mast on archaeological grounds.
He also said the mast would damage the visual amenities of the area which is close to the popular Ring of Kerry tourist route.
Hutchinson 3G has the Government’s national contract to roll out broadband to previously unserviced rural areas.
The company claims there is a strong demand for broadband in the Glenbeigh area and no other site options were available.
Glenbeigh is a hotbed of opposition to masts, with objections to five such proposals in the general area.
Hutchinson 3G said that, given there were 67 objections to the current proposal, the possibility of finding another site was limited.
Company spokesman Brian Phelan said they would continue to try to bring broadband to such areas.
“Broadband has the potential to create hundreds of jobs, especially in small to medium-sized businesses, and is probably the most important thing for rural Ireland since rural electrification,” he added.
Normally, An Bord Pleanála overturns Kerry County Council’s decisions in relation to masts because it does not agree with a controversial rule by the council which bans such masts on sites which are within a kilometre of houses, schools and other residential buildings.
On this occasion, however, Bord Pleanála – while still disagreeing with the one-kilometre rule – granted the appeal on grounds of protecting the sensitive landscape and local archaeology.
This story appeared in the printed version of the Irish Examiner Monday, March 08, 2010
Read more:
irishexaminer.com/ireland/bronze-age-remains-block-broadband-plan-113928.html
The exciting new find by ‘amateur’ archaeologists of the long barrow under The Cove, at Stanton Drew.
Ask anyone in Bristol to name an ancient stone circle, and 90 per cent of people will probably say Stonehenge. A few of the wider-read sorts might mention Avebury. But remarkably, few will say the words Stanton Drew.
While Wiltshire’s two landmark sites are known worldwide, Bristol’s own major neolithic stone circle goes largely unnoticed.
But all that might be about to change, thanks to a team of enthusiastic amateur archaeologists who have discovered some intriguing new evidence that suggests the Stanton Drew site, near Chew Magna, may actually be 1,000 years older than historians had previously thought.
The discovery has been made by geophysics enthusiast John Oswin and amateur archaeologist John Richards, both from the Bath and Camerton archaeological society, who have been working with a team of volunteers under the guidance of Richard Sermon, Bath and North-East Somerset Archaeological Officer.
The two Johns have spent the last six months studying the results of their survey of the site in the summer, and they believe that long before the mystical stone circles were erected on the site around 2,500BC, there was an impressive “long barrow” burial chamber on the land.
I find a windswept John Oswin wandering thoughtfully around the area of the ancient monument known as The Cove. Separated from the main circles by the village church, this set of three ancient standing stones is nestled at the back of a pub car park.
“This is where we believe the long barrow would have been,” says John, a former defence industry sonar expert at Filton who has taken a fancy for geophysical archaeology as a retirement hobby.
“I use a machine called a resistance meter,” he explains. “It looks like a walking frame with a small computer attached. But actually, it is using scanning technology to create a picture of any archaeology that might be beneath the surface. Unlike traditional digging, this allows us to see what’s below the surface in a non-invasive manner. Most people know about geophysics these days from watching Time Team on the television.
“Many neolithic stone circles are built on or near the site of an even more ancient long barrow – a large burial chamber. There is one, for example, at Stonehenge.
“But nobody had realised there was one here before because, although geophysicists had used this kind of equipment to scan the ground beneath the main stone circles, nobody had ever thought to come and scan this area known as The Cove.
“I first discovered there was a very large structure buried beneath the ground here back in the summer,” John recalls. “I had been scanning all day, and then moved next door into the Druid’s Arms to download my material on to a computer over a pint.
“When I saw the shape of a long barrow appearing on the screen my mouth just dropped open. It was one of those eyes-on-stalks moments, because I knew the civilisation that built stone circles came a thousand years after the civilisation that built long barrows.
“This would probably mean the stone circles had been specially built on a site that was already of sacred significance – a resting place of their distant ancestors.
“The neolithic – stone age – people who would have built the long barrow would have left the bodies of their dead to decay on the surface, before moving the bones down into the chamber – but only when they had been picked clean by birds or the flesh had rotted away.
“We believe they would then have brought the bones of their forefathers out for sacred rituals on special occasions. It’s not that different to modern day Catholics parading the bodies of saints through towns for feast days.
“But by the time people came to build the stone circles here a thousand years later, this would all have been distant folklore – as distant to them as the Norman Conquest is to us.”
To find out more about the significance of the find, I meet up with the project leader, John Richards, at his office at Bristol University – where he works as an IT manager.
“For me, archaeology is a hobby, but it’s something I’m passionate about,” he says, as he brings up the scan images on his computer screen.
“We were lucky to be given the chance to scan the ground at Stanton Drew, because access is often restricted by English Heritage, which maintains the monument.
“But we were approached as a society last year by Richard Sermon, the archaeological officer for the council. He wondered if we could give a demonstration of our geo-phys equipment to the public as part of a Festival of British Archaeology event.
“We said, yes we’d love to do it, but if we do, perhaps you could arrange something for us? Within a few weeks Richard had managed to get permission for us to survey the Stanton Drew site.
“It was exciting to get the chance to do the survey, so you can imagine how thrilled we were to find something as significant as a long barrow.”
Since unveiling their find in archaeological publications recently, the two Johns have received congratulations from professional archaeologists all over the country, many of whom were keen to find out more about their data.
“We’re hoping that this will be just the start of the story,” John Richards says.
“We’re hoping to get permission to go back on the site to do some more survey work this summer, and if we can get permission from the church and the pub landlord, we would like to scan the churchyard and the pub garden too, because we suspect the long barrow might extend on to their land – which would make this more than 20 metres in length.
“In other words, this would have been a very distinctive sacred landmark in the area 5,000 years ago.”
A change of mind, a change of politics or maybe a devilish plot.......
Port developers anxious to avoid ‘very significant‘
neolithic complex, writes FRANK MACDONALD , Environment Editor
A PROPOSED deepwater container port at Bremore in north Co Dublin may be moved farther north to Gormanston, Co Meath, to avoid encroaching on a neolithic complex of passage tombs.
A spokesman for Treasury Holdings, which is planning to develop the new facility in partnership with Drogheda Port, confirmed yesterday that one of the options now being considered was to “shift it off Bremore headland” for archaeological reasons.
He said it had become clear at an early stage that the neolithic complex at Bremore was “very significant”, and the developers would be anxious to avoid it by examining alternative locations, such as Gormanston.
However, no final decision has been taken.
One of the constraints is that the Gormanston site is partly covered by an EU-designated special protection area (SPA) for wild birds.
It is also believed to contain another archaeological complex, though this is not thought to be as significant as the one located at Bremore.
“We’ve done a significant amount of preliminary work, including archaeological investigations by Margaret Gowen and Company,” the spokesman said, adding that Treasury would now be taking on an environmental specialist to assess the Gormanston option.
Treasury acquired options to purchase several landholdings at Bremore before entering into partnership with Drogheda Port, but it is understood the company holds none for Gormanston.
Land in the area would be cheaper to acquire now due to the property crash.
“We now have to work through the environmental issues as well as the cultural heritage and archaeological issues,” the spokesman said.
He added that Treasury and its partners would be consulting with “all the various interests”, such as An Taisce, which it has met already.
It is likely to be autumn before a firmer proposal will be put out for consultation.
“Ireland needs a deepwater port; the IDA (Industrial Development Authority) is conscious that we are losing projects because we don’t have one,” according to the spokesman.
An Taisce’s monuments and antiquities committee has warned that any port development at Bremore would “completely obliterate a passage tomb cemetery of neolithic date with affinities to Newgrange and a mid-16th century historic harbour site”.
Commenting on the possibility that it could be relocated to Gormanston, committee chairman Dr Mark Clinton said it would be likely to affect a sandy beach “most beloved in the locality” and shoreline that forms part of the river Nanny SPA.
Any such plan would require a full assessment of its environmental effects to be prepared and placed before the public prior to being approved.
“It would appear that the exact opposite of these legal requirements is in motion,” Dr Clinton said.
He also queried the need for a new port, noting that throughput at Drogheda Port had fallen by 50 per cent in 2008, according to its most recent set of accounts, while business at Dublin Port was down by 10 per cent.
“There is no need for a new deepwater port,” he said.
irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0223/1224265036102.html
Gordon Kingston on The Heritage Journal
Bremore: Proposed Port Site to change to Gormanston?
heritageaction.wordpress.com/2010/02/24/bremore-proposed-port-site-to-change-to-gormanston/
One of the world’s oldest shipwrecks has been discovered off the coast of Devon after lying on the seabed for almost 3,000 years.
The trading vessel was carrying an extremely valuable cargo of tin and hundreds of copper ingots from the Continent when it sank
Experts say the “incredibly exciting” discovery provides new evidence about the extent and sophistication of Britain’s links with Europe in the Bronze Age as well as the remarkable seafaring abilities of the people during the period.
Archaeologists have described the vessel, which is thought to date back to around 900BC, as being a “bulk carrier” of its age.
The copper and tin would have been used for making bronze – the primary product of the period which was used in the manufacture of not only weapons, but also tools, jewellery, ornaments and other items.
Archaeologists believe the copper – and possibly the tin – was being imported into Britain and originated in a number of different countries throughout Europe, rather than from a single source, demonstrating the existence of a complex network of trade routes across the Continent.
Academics at the University of Oxford are carrying out further analysis of the cargo in order to establish its exact origins.
However, it is thought the copper would have come from the Iberian peninsular, Alpine Europe, especially modern day Switzerland, and possibly other locations in France, such as the Massif Central, and even as far as Austria.
It is first time tin ingots from this period have ever been found in Britain, a discovery which may support theories that the metal was being mined in the south west at this time.
If the tin was not produced in Britain, it is likely it would have also come from the Iberian peninsular or from eastern Germany.
The wreck has been found in just eight to ten metres of water in a bay near Salcombe, south Devon, by a team of amateur marine archaeologists from the South West Maritime Archaeological Group.
In total, 295 artefacts have so far been recovered, weighing a total of more than 84kg.
The cargo recovered includes 259 copper ingots and 27 tin ingots. Also found was a bronze leaf sword, two stone artefacts that could have been sling shots, and three gold wrist torcs – or bracelets.
The team have yet to uncover any of the vessel’s structure, which is likely to have eroded away.
However, experts believe it would have been up to 40ft long and up to 6ft wide, and have been constructed of planks of timber, or a wooden frame with a hide hull. It would have had a crew of around 15 and been powered by paddles.
Archaeologists believe it would have been able to cross the Channel directly between Devon and France to link into European trade networks, rather than having to travel along the coast to the narrower crossing between modern day Dover and Calais.
Although the vessel’s cargo came from as far afield as southern Europe, it is unlikely it would have been carried all the way in the same craft, but in a series of boats, undertaking short coastal journeys.
The wreck site is on part of the seabed called Wash Gully, which is around 300 yards from the shore.
There is evidence of prehistoric field systems and Bronze Age roundhouses on the coast nearby and it is thought the vessel could have sunk while attempting to land, or could have been passing along the coast.
The coastline is notoriously treacherous and there is a reef close by which could have claimed the vessel.
The recovery work took place between February and November last year but the discovery was not announced until this month’s International Shipwreck Conference, in Plymouth.
The finds have been reported to both English Heritage and the Receiver of Wreck, which administers all shipwrecks. The artefacts are due to be handed over to the British Museum next week.
They will be independently valued and the museum will pay the team for the items.
Mick Palmer, chairman of the South West Maritime Archaeological Group, said: “For the British Isles, this is extremely important. This was a cargo trading vessel on a big scale.
“There is more down there and we will carry on searching for it. We anticipate a lot more will be found.”
Dave Parham, senior lecturer in marine archaeology at Bournemouth University and a member of the team, said: “What we are seeing is trade in action.
“We are not stuck with trying to work out trade based on a few deposits across a broader landscape. We are looking at the stuff actually on the boat being moved.
“Everything that is in the ship sinks with it and is on the seabed somewhere. What you would call this today is a bulk carrier. It was carrying what was for the time a large consignment of raw materials.”
Dr Peter Northover, a scientist at the University of Oxford who has been analysing the find, said: “These are the produce of a multitude of countries, scattered right around Europe, up and down the Atlantic coast and inland.
“It came from a combination of places. It is showing the diversity of the trade.
“Metal traders and workers would have traded parcels of metal with each other. The metal would have moved in steps, along networks of contacts exchanging metal as and when they need it.”
Dr Stuart Needham, a Bronze Age archaeologist, said: “This is genuinely exciting.
“Everyone knows that man has been walking around on land since time immemorial, but I think people now will be surprised to know how much they were plying the seaways at this time, up and down the Atlantic seaboard and across the Channel.
“There’s a complex lattice of interactions across Europe happening throughout this period.
“A lot of stuff may have moved across land, but it is eminently possible at this stage that there were quite sophisticated maritime networks with specialist mariners – people who know how to read the tides and the stars and who are not just casually going out on the sea to do some deep sea fishing.
“If you have got specialist mariners plying the Atlantic seaways, there is every possibility they could be picking up material in different locations and stockpiling it.
“The mainstay of this exchange network might have been a number of vessels undertaking short journeys. It doesn’t mean there weren’t occasional vessels and people going longer distances.”
One other Bronze Age vessel has previously been found near Salcombe, where just 53 artefacts were recovered. Another eight Bronze Age items have also been found at a third nearby spot, indicating another possible wreck.
The only other Bronze Age wrecks found in the UK have been located on land, or on the foreshore, at Dover and North Ferriby, on the Humber.
Ben Roberts, Bronze Age specialist at the British Museum, said: “It is an incredibly exciting find. What we have here is really, really good evidence of trade. We don’t get many shipwreck sites.
“It is very rare to get a snapshot of this level of activity. It is very possible there were also animals and people going across the Channel too.
“We hardly ever get to see evidence of this cross Channel trade in action. It is a huge amount of cargo.”
Article by Jasper Copping; Telegraph
telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/archeology/7228108/Bronze-Age-shipwreck-found-off-Devon-coast.html
Discover the Orkney Dream.
A surprisingly good article from Countryfile on the Orkneys...
An Taisce is The National Trust of Ireland, a map outlining the proposed port shows the importance of this threatened landscape, and how the development will destroy both archaeological sites and a fragile habitat.
The battle begins.....
The ancient Bru na Boinne site around Newgrange may lose its World Heritage status if the proposed M2 motorway goes ahead, it was claimed today.
The National Monuments Forum warned if changes are not made to the new motorway plans, the area near the Boyne in Co Meath is likely to lose recognition from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco).
Dr George Eogan, Professor Emeritus of Archaeology at University College Dublin (UCD), said the new motorway is too close to the monuments and will have a considerable impact on the surrounding landscape.
“Five hundred metres is simply too close, and it is conceivable that Newgrange could lose its World Heritage Status,” he said.
The site can be saved if Environment Minister John Gormley fast-tracks the new National Monuments Bill 2009 according to the National Monuments Forum.
Vincent Salafia, National Monuments Forum spokesman, claimed the minister created unnecessary delays which place Ireland’s heritage at risk.
“We urge Minister Gormley to deliver this long overdue legislation and to ensure it is strong enough to protect Newgrange from this outlandish proposal,” Mr Salafia said.
Proposed Slane Bypass will skim the Edge of Brú na Bóinne!
The National Roads Authority has given details of plans for the new Slane bypass, which would be built 500m from the World Heritage Site at Newgrange.
While the plan has been welcomed locally, it is expected that there will be controversy.
The bridge and the road through the village of Slane, Co Meath, is one of the most dangerous stretches of roads in Ireland.
Over 20 people have been killed in accidents and locals have long campaigned for a bypass around the village.
The NRA is proposing to build the route down river of the present bridge and to the east of the village.
The proposed bypass will be 500m away from the buffer-zone around the World Heritage Site at Brú na Bóinne, which comprises the ancient megalithic tombs at Newgrange, Knowth and Dowth.
It will also impact on the museum dedicated to Ireland’s most famous World War I poet, Francis Ledwidge, who came from Slane.
The Environmental Impact Statement for the project acknowledges that 44 archaeological sites will be within 500m of the roadway and that the potential to uncover much more during work is high.
While there will be a visual impact from the river, the Environmental Impact Statement says there will be negligible impact on the Site.
Damage at Midmill, Aberdeenshire
The Cove that turned into a longbarrow.....
Archaeologists have discovered the collection of prehistoric standing stones at Stanton Drew is older than originally thought.
During geophysical surveys last summer, they found the outline of a burial mound dated from nearly 1000 years before the stone circles.
The surveys were carried out by Bath and Camerton Archaeological Society and the council’s Archaeological Officer.
It is hoped the discovery will raise Stanton Drew’s profile with scholars.
Their work has brought new light on the origins of the Cove – the three large stones in the beer garden of the Druid’s Arms.
Stone circles such as those at Stanton Drew are known to date broadly to the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age, about 3000 to 2000 BC.
Given the new dating, by John Oswin, the upright stones of the Cove might be better explained as the portals or facade of a chambered tomb, similar to the Stoney Littleton long barrow near Wellow.
Bath and North East Somerset Council’s Archaeological Officer, Richard Sermon, said: “Stanton Drew has been much neglected compared to Avebury and Stonehenge.
“This will raise its profile with the scholars and it [Stanton Drew] will be recognised as one of the major prehistoric sites in England.”
Chance put up this news in December, but the full 50 page geophysical report seems to be online permanently and this rather extraordinary discovery in the news now!
news.bbc.co.uk/local/bristol/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8454000/8454448.stm
A Norfolk museum is to close to the public for about four months while the central stump of a Bronze Age oak circle known as Seahenge is installed.
The Lynn Museum in King’s Lynn has recorded a large increase in visitors since opening a gallery in 2008 devoted to the 55 outer timbers of the circle.
Work is now taking place to create a mount for the 4,000-year-old stump which weighs more than one tonne.
Seahenge was discovered emerging from a beach at Holme-next-the-Sea in 1998.
Its 55 oak posts in a circle with a central stump sat unnoticed and undisturbed off the Norfolk coast for almost 4,000 years, but became exposed at low tides after the peat dune covering it was swept away by storms.
Archaeologists believe between 50 and 80 people may have helped build the circle, possibly to mark the death of an important individual.
The Seahenge gallery at the museum is drawing thousands of visitors
The timbers were excavated in 1999 and went to the Bronze Age Centre at Flag Fen near Peterborough to be studied and the preservation programme begun.
To finish the conservation programme they then went to the Mary Rose Trust in Portsmouth.
But at 8ft (2.5m) in height the preservation process for the central stump has taken longer.
Derrick Murphy, from Norfolk County Council, said: “Why our ancestors built Seahenge remains a mystery, yet we can state categorically that it is one of the most significant historical discoveries ever to be found in Britain.
“The installation of the central stump within the gallery at the Lynn Museum marks a fitting end to this chapter of the story of Seahenge.”
The museum will close at the end of January.

Silbury with WKLB to the left, and EKLB behind the camera, with WKLB facing towards Overton Hill

A not very good photo of the notice board for the gorge, which is a SSI....

Summer green in this season of snow, the path going towards the narrowest part of the gorge, with the rare nettle leaf bellflower on the left.
South-West World Heritage Sites join forces for interactive sustainable transport map
For those who enjoy playing with maps and sustainable transport.......
Four of the South-West’s most breathtaking nature areas, including the famous Jurrasic Coast, are hoping to make travel to the heritage sites easier than ever with a new website.
World Heritage Sites the City of Bath, the Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape, the Jurassic Coast of Dorset and East Devon and Stonehenge and Avebury will be positioned on an interactive map highlighting ways to circumnavigate them on sustainable transport.
Sally King, Manager of the 95-mile Jurassic Coast trail which is home to relics from 185 million years of evolution, said she was “delighted” to have led the South West World Heritage Sites project, which took three years to complete.
“We hope to make it easy for people to discover ways of visiting and exploring our unique natural and cultural heritage in the South West without travelling by car,” she explained.
“This will help them to protect our environment and enjoy themselves in the process.”
Under the terms of a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation convention, the UK is obliged to safeguard World Heritage Sites for future generations.
Visit the trail here;
A FIRE which swept across a large area of North Yorkshire moorland has revealed a mysterious monument which could date back to Neolithic times.
This aerial picture from English Heritage shows a stone enclosure and a number of stone cairns on a 62-acre site near the village of Goathland.
David MacLeod, senior investigator with English Heritage’s aerial survey team, said: “We were called in by the North York Moors National Park Authority to capture aerial views before the site is recovered by vegetation.
“We saw at least 20 cairns of varying size, taking pictures from various angles, allowing us to set the site in a wider landscape context.” He said the site could have once been a pen for agricultural use or perhaps a graveyard.
“Whatever its origins, it stands as reminder that the history of North Yorkshire is far from done and dusted, but is still being written,” he added.
An archaeological report is expected on the site next year.
yorkpress.co.uk/news/4821294.North_York_Moors_blaze_uncovers_mystery_monument/
Note; No aerial photo shown!
Maeve Kennedy in the Guardian ruminating on pork roast feasting on Solstice day at Stonehenge.....
Some 4,500 years ago, as the solstice sun rose on Stonehenge, it is very likely that a midwinter feast would already have been roasting on the cooking fires.
Experts believe that huge midwinter feasts were held in that period at the site and a startling picture is now emerging of just how far cattle were moved for the banquet. Recent analysis of the cattle and pig bones from the era found in the area suggests the cattle used were walked hundreds of miles to be slaughtered for the solstice celebrations – from the west country or west Wales.
Professor Mike Parker Pearson of the University of Sheffield and his team have just won a grant of £800,000 from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, to answer some of the riddles about the enigmatic prehistoric monument.
The grant is to fund Feeding Stonehenge, his follow-up research on the wealth of material, including animal bones, pottery and plant remains, which they found in recent excavations at Durrington Walls, a few miles from the stone circle – a site which Parker Pearson believes key to understanding why Stonehenge was built and how it was used.
His team fully excavated some huts but located the foundations of scores more, the largest neolothic settlement in Britain. To his joy it was a prehistoric tip, “the filthiest site known in Britain”, as he dubbed it.
“I’ve always thought when we admire monuments like Stonehenge, not enough attention has been given to who made the sandwiches and the cups of tea for the builders,” said Parker Pearson.
“The logistics of the operation were extraordinary. Not just food for hundreds of people but antler picks, hide ropes, all the infrastructure needed to supply the materials and supplies needed. Where did they get all this food from? This is what we hope to discover.”
Stonehenge was begun almost 5,000 years ago with a ditch and earth bank, and developed over 1,000 years, with the circle of bluestones brought from the Preseli hills in west Wales, and the double decker bus sized sarsen stones.
It was too early for the Phoenicians, the Romans or the largely mythical Celtic druids. The Anglo Saxons believed Stonehenge was the work of a race of lost giants, and a 12th-century historian explained that Merlin flew the huge stones from Ireland.
It has been explained as a place of druidic sacrifice, a stone computer, a place of witchcraft and magic, a tomb, a temple or a solar calendar. It is aligned on both the summer and winter solstice, crucial dates which told prehistoric farmers that the time of harvest was coming, or the shortest day of winter past.
Although not all archaeologists agree – Geoff Wainwright and Tim Darvill have dubbed Stonehenge the stone age Lourdes, a place of healing by the magic bluestones – Parker Pearson believes it was a place of the dead, while Durrington Walls, with its wooden henge, was the place of its living builders, and the generations who came to feast, and carry out rituals for their dead, moving from Durrington to the nearby river and on by the great processional avenue to Stonehenge.
He found no evidence that Durrington was permanently inhabited or farmed, and the first tests on the pig and cattle bones support his theory that it was a place where people gathered for short periods on special occasions.
The pigs were evidently slaughtered at mid-winter, and he expects the cattle bones to back this. What the sample already tested shows is that they were slaughtered immediately after arrival, after travelling immense distances.
“We are going to know so much about the lives of the people who built Stonehenge,” Parker Pearson said, “how they lived, what they ate, where they came from.”
guardian.co.uk/culture/2009/dec/20/stonehenge-animal-bones-solstice-feast
A CAMPAIGN to Save Bremore claims the coastal strip on the Meath/Dublin border may be one of the richest archaeological areas in Ireland, with aspects comparable to the Hill of Tara.
Among the heritage sites in locality is the Bremore passage tomb complex – a designated national monument – a series of several unclassified monuments in the Knocknagin townland and the mid-16th-century Newhaven Bay.
Drogheda Port and companies associated with Treasury Holdings have earmarked the area for the development of a deepwater port, industrial units, a motorway link to the M1 and a new rail link to the main Dublin-Belfast railway.
According to archaeologist Prof George Eogan: “Bremore may have been the first point of entry for the settlements of what is now known as Fingal/east Meath and the Boyne Valley area.”
Save Bremore claims the Bremore passage tomb and adjacent Gormanston passage tomb should be considered within the greater context of passage tombs nearby at Knowth, Dowth and Newgrange.
The group quoted from archaeologist Dr Mark Clinton of An Taisce’s national monuments and antiquities committee, who has said that one mound at the tomb complex had an entrance orientation indicating the possibility that it was aligned with the summer solstice.
“In this regard, and given their morphology and geographical location, there’s every possibility the builders were the near ancestors of those that built the nearby world-acclaimed tombs of Brú na Bóinne [the Boyne Valley tombs].”
Dr Clinton said archaeologically, Bremore was comparable with Tara. “Tara started with a passage tomb known as the Mound of the Hostages and developed over different periods: likewise the Bremore tombs would appear to be the start of Brú na Bóinne.
“The parallel is clear – no Mound of the Hostages, no Tara; no Bremore, no Newgrange.”
Attempts to contact the developers of the proposed deep sea port were unsuccessful yesterday.
The Treasury Holdings website quotes managing director John Bruder as saying Bremore had enormous development potential and is one of the most exciting real estate developments available.
irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2009/1221/1224261043449.html
More information here;
heritageaction.wordpress.com/2009/12/20/save-bremore-campaign/
AN ANCIENT rubbish tip – inhabited nearly 2,000 years ago – is disappearing into the sea, archeologists have warned.
The Iron Age midden on Skye’s west coast has so far yielded bone fragments, stone tools, a button manufactured from horn and the top of a human skull.
But experts are battling the elements in a race to save the 1,900-year-old treasure trove from the elements.
The manmade tools and fragments are already under attack from lashing waves and strong winds, with significant amounts of material already lost to the sea. A report published by Highland Council’s Historic Environment Record said that at the current rate of erosion, the site will not last beyond 2010.
The settlement is thought to have been inhabited from 80AD, about the time the Colosseum was built in Rome.
It was discovered by local archeologists Martin Wildgoose and Steven Birch in 2005.
Excavations last year and this year have uncovered a number of fascinating objects. Among the tools and animal bones, archeologists found the remains of a human skull with a small hole drilled into the top.
Experts have speculated that the hole could have been made while the victim was still alive as a primitive form of surgery. Known as trepanation, the procedure was a common remedy in many cultures thought to cure seizures and mental ailments.
The rock shelter and midden, known as Uamh an Eich Bhric, or Cave of the Speckled Horse, is about 3km south-west of the village of Fiskavaig.
It is extremely difficult to get to the site by land, with excavators having to negotiate a steep 100 metre descent of high grass and heather to the shore below.
Access by sea is only possible in calm conditions, due to the hazardous landing on a boulder and pebble beach.
The site was uncovered when a huge talus, or pile of broken rock, that had protected the cave from the sea was partially breached during the winter storms of 2005.
Since then, the tides have exposed the site and continue to wash out new material on a regular basis.
When it became clear that time was against the archeologists, Historic Scotland sponsored the excavations to recover as many artefacts as possible before the site was destroyed. A spokeswoman for Historic Scotland said: “From the evidence gathered it was clear that an important and unusual site was at severe risk from continuing erosion.
“A campaign of excavation was quickly organised, with funding from Historic Scotland and others.
“The excavations have revealed that during the Iron Age, people used this location as a temporary home.”
Details of those who lived in the cave were yet to emerge, she said, adding that from ongoing analysis there was strong evidence of metal-working.
She said it was hoped the discoveries would allow archaeologists to further explore the history of the inhabitants, with important implications for the understanding of Scotland’s west coast during the Iron Age.
She added: “Although the site will continue to be eroded by the sea, the archaeologists have rescued an enormous amount of data and the gains in knowledge are likely to be very significant.”
Skye, known for its abundant historical finds, has had several important discoveries in the past few months.
Last Thursday, 47-year-old Graeme Mackenzie discovered a Viking anchor while digging near his home in Sleat.
The find was hailed as further evidence that Norse raiders never returned to their native land, choosing instead to settle on Skye and many other places along Scotland’s north-western seaboard.
And in November, house builders near Armadale pier uncovered six richly decorated prehistoric graves, one of the most significant archaeological finds yet made in the Highlands.
news.scotsman.com/scotland/Tide-turns-on-Iron-Age.5903400.jp
More information and the subsequent later archaeological excavations are here, with lots of interesting photos...
Hundreds of people have staged a protest on land near an Iron Age hill fort in a bid to stop it being sold and keep it in public ownership.
Worthing Council has already said it has suspended the sale and will also review the decision to sell farmland near Cissbury Ring, in West Sussex.
The council said the review was because of public concern about the site.
The South Downs Society said it was a famous archaeological site that needed to remain in public ownership.
The group, Stop the Cissbury Sell-Off (SCSO), said about 400 people gathered for the rally and walked across the land in question, letting off flares.
SCSO spokesman Trevor Hodgson said there was strong feeling and a “massive turnout” by people who had vowed to fight on until the land was fully protected for generations to come.
Worthing Council said the decision to sell two parcels of agricultural land, 57 and 132 acres in size, was taken following the death of the former tenant farmer.
The council said the review would consider fresh options and talks would be held with the South Downs Joint Committee and the National Trust.
Mr Waight said: “Because the decision was made a year ago and because of public concern, we feel it right to review the decision made over a year ago in order to make sure we take everything into account before a final decision is made.”
Spokesman for the South Downs Society, Steve Ankers, welcomed the move but called for a permanent halt to the sale.
He said: “It is essential that this important site remains in public ownership. Cissbury Ring cannot survive properly on its own.”
He added: “If it was sold, it could end up being fenced off into unsightly paddocks with no access for the public.”
An interesting article in The New York Times....
THE Ridgeway is the oldest continuously used road in Europe, dating back to the Stone Age. Situated in southern England, built by our Neolithic ancestors, it’s at least 5,000 years old, and may even have existed when England was still connected to continental Europe, and the Thames was a tributary of the Rhine.
Ridgeway Trail; Once it probably ran all the way from Dorset in the southwest to Lincolnshire in the northeast, following the line of an escarpment — a chalk ridge rising from the land — that diagonally bisects southern England. Long ago it wasn’t just a road, following the high ground, away from the woods and swamps lower down, but a defensive barrier, a bulwark against marauders from the north, whomever they may have been. At some point in the Bronze Age (perhaps around 2,500 B.C.), a series of forts were built — ringed dikes protecting villages — so the whole thing became a kind of prototype of Hadrian’s Wall in the north of England.
The land here is downland, somewhere between moorland and farmland, hill after hill curving to the horizon in chalk slopes (the word down is related to dune). Here on these pale rolling hills, the plowed fields, littered with white hunks of rock, sweep away in gradations of color, from creamy white to dark chocolate. The grassland becomes silvery as it arches into the distance. The wind always seems to be blowing. The landscape is elemental, austere, with a kind of monumental elegance. The formal lines of the fields and hills not only speak of the severity of life in the prehistoric past, but would also match some well-tended parkland belonging to an earl......
three pages read on....
Bremore. Quo Vadis
By Gordon Kingston, Heritage Action
By 2007 Ireland’s booming economy and growth in demand for construction materials, was causing increased capacity pressure at the ten ports along its Eastern seaboard. One obvious consequence of this was the “Port Tunnel”, a new access to the largest port, in Dublin, which was constructed at enormous public expense, €752 million, to ease the traffic congestion caused by heavy goods vehicles in the city. A further modification proposed to address the capacity problem was an expansion of the port, a concept requiring the infilling of 52 acres of Dublin Bay. This idea, initially suggested in 1988, is currently under consideration by An Bord Pleanala.
In the meantime Drogheda Port Company came up with its own proposal, a new large-capacity, deep water port at Bremore and entered into a government-approved joint venture for the project with Castle Market Holdings Ltd.. Castle Market Holdings is owned, via Real Estate Opportunities Ltd., by Richard Barrett and Johnny Ronan’s Treasury Holdings, one of the largest developers in Ireland and a company with a long track record of “unwillingness to back down in the face of legal threats.....
read on.......
An ancient British inland Atlantis dating back millennia has been discovered on a remote moor.
The remains – including a mini-Stonehenge – were found when an old reservoir was drained in Dartmoor, Devon.
The find includes remains of ancient walled buildings, burial mounds and a stone circle 27m (89ft) across.
‘Most of the stones we found would have been put in place around 4,000 years ago but some of the flint is much earlier, going right back to the Mesolithic period around 7,000 to 8,000 years ago,’ said Dartmoor National park authority archaeologist Jane Marchand.
From The Metro, no other information or news elsewhere but be wary of news items carrying ‘Atlantis’ and ‘Stonehenge’ in their words!....
Stanton Drew and folklore
The following which is taken from John Wood’s book A Description of Bath of 1765 describes the superstition that lay round the Wedding stones of Stanton Drew as seen by the local people. People being turned to stone, and also drinking from the stones, which is a slightly different aspect of the story.
John Wood had a weird and wonderful theory about Stanton Drew and Druids, that belongs elsewhere, but in writing his book he gave valuable information as to the the existence of the two Tyning stones, and another folklore story about Hakill the Giant who in good giant tradition threw The Coit from Maes Knoll, a hill situated west from Stanton Drew, which also encompasses Maes Knoll Hillfort and the great Wansdyke barrier which either divided two kingdoms in the late British Iron Age or was some form of defense. The work of giants perhaps recognised by our 18th century inhabitants but not rationalised as they are today!
Stanton Drew in the County of Somerset
That’s where the Devil played at Sue’s request,
They paid the price for dancing on a Sunday.
Now they are standing evermore at rest.
The Wedding Stones
“The remains of this model bear the name of The Wedding, from a tradition that as a woman was going to be married, she and the rest of the company were changed into the stones of which they consist “No one,” says the Country People about Stantondrue, was ever able to reckon the “number of these metamorphosed Stones”, or to take “a draught of them” or tho’ several have attempted to do both, and proceeded till they were either struck dead upon the spot, or with such an illness as soon carried them off.
This was seriously told to me when I began to a Plan of them (the stones) on the 12th August 1740 to deter me from proceeding: And as a storm accidentally arose just after, and blew down part of a Great Tree near the body of the work, the people were then thoroughly satisfied that I had disturbed the Guardian Spirits of the metamorphosed Stones, and from thence great pains were taken to convince me of the Impiety of intent I was about.
Hakim’s Quoit
Large flat stone called Hakill on the north-east side of the river by which Stantondrue is situated: And this stone tho’ greatly delapidated is till ten feet long, six feet broad, near two feet thick, and lies about 1860 feet from the centre of the circle.
....Now if we draw a line from the centre of the Circle D, to the centre of the Circle B and produce it westward 992 feet, it will terminate on three stones in a garden (Druid Arms now) by the parish church of Stantondrue: two of which stones are erect, and the other lies flat on the ground............. it will terminate on two stone lying flat on the ground in a field call the Lower-Tining (stones now vanished).
In plowing the ground of Maes Knoll as well as that of Solsbury Hill, the people frequently turned up burnt stones, and often find other Marks to prove each Place to have been long inhabited: the former, according to a Tradition among the people of the Country thereabouts, was the Residence of one Hakill, a Giant, who is reported to have toss’d the Coit that make part of the works of Stantondrue from the Top of that Hill to the place where it now lies: He is also reported to have made Maes-Knoll Tump with one spadeful of Earth, and to had the village underneath that Hill given him......
The ‘wedding stones’ story is found at other stone circles, the wedding taking place on a Saturday and lasting through the night into Sunday, when they were all turned to stone by the piper/harper, or in this case the ‘devil’. The christian church again concocting a story to stop people enjoying themselves, one wonders where this story originally came into the history timeline.
Funnily in these tales caught from the past about Stanton Drew there is no ‘drinking stone’ myth whereby they would have gone down to the river Chew and refreshed themselves.
The ‘Song of Stanton Drew’ can be found here...
News from BBC Jersey
The 6,000 year-old burial site at La Hougue Bie is one of the best preserved remnants of the Neolithic period in Western Europe.
Every spring and autumn crowds of people gather to watch the equinox from inside the chamber.
Archaeologists can make educated guesses about what went on there, but much is shrouded in mystery.
The name is Norse in origin, coming from hougue meaning man made and bie meaning Homestead.
Archaeologist Olga Finch is the curator at La Hougue Bie, and explained this in more detail.
“Hougue and Bie are Norse words. Hougue was a term the Vikings used for man—made mounds, and Bie means homestead. So it could mean the homestead near the mound,” said Olga.
Despite being best known as a burial ground Olga says that this was just one, albeit important, aspect of what went on.
“It was almost like a cross between a modern-day church and a community hall.
“We know there were rituals associated with seasonal activities because the Neolithic people were the first farmers,” she explained.
Therefore the cycles of nature were crucial to the survival of the indigenous population. The discovery of the equinox alignment brought home how important this time of year was to the farming community.
It is one of Western Europe’s best preserved mounds
The Equinox alignment happens twice a year. La Hougue Bie’s entrance points directly east, which enables a beam of sunlight to travel up the passageway to illuminate the chamber deep in the mound.
Today, this natural phenomenon inspires awe, not just among the community at large, but with archaeologists like Olga.
“We are talking about 6,000 years ago. The window into the tomb was set up perfectly, so that the rising sun penetrates not just the front, but all the way back into the terminal cell,” she said.
Olga believes the terminal cell at the foremost part of the mound would have been the focal point for any rituals which took place.
Entering the mound is a mildly uncomfortable experience, requiring visitors to crouch, chimp-like, to negotiate the nine metre passageway leading to the chamber.
Olga says this was probably to conceal the main area for ritual from uninvited eyes.
The passage opens up into the main chamber, which takes a cruciform shape. Two side chambers to the north and south were the burial plots for the dead.
Every spring and autumn crowd gather to watch the equinox
The large flat rock at the back of the passage is raised up from the floor denoting a more sacred area.
“It is almost like a modern day church. The further back you go the more sacred and spiritual it gets and less people have access to it.”
“There is a little terminal cell at the back, which may have housed an important object or person.
“The equinox sunrise concentrates initially in that area. This shaft of light perhaps symbolises bringing in new energy. It is all about rebirth and contact with the dead.”
“Anyone who experiences it knows they have witnessed something really special. To think 6000 years ago there would have been people in here experiencing the same thing,” Olga explained.
Again Olga can only hazard an educated guess as to the meaning of the rituals that went on all those thousands of years ago.
“We know there were little seeds placed on the cairn stones, so it may have been a plea to the gods for a good harvest,” she said.
The mound may have been used in a similar way to a modern day church
The human remains of about eight people – male and female adults – were found at the site. The items they were buried with are strong evidence in a belief in the afterlife.
“There were bones of cattle, which may have been left as food for the afterlife. There were also flint tools that show people believed they would need these things in the next world,” Olga said.
Despite significant digs in the ‘90s, much of the site remains unexcavated. La Hougue Bie may reveal more of its secrets for future generations to wonder about.
“It is one of the best preserved and one of the largest Neolithic sites in western Europe, so Jersey is very lucky in that respect.
“It has almost cathedral status compared to other sites in the island. A lot of sites have been robbed or destroyed. We are very lucky to have it here in Jersey,” Olga concluded.
Photos of site on the link.....
news.bbc.co.uk/local/jersey/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8196000/8196305.stm
Fascinating account of its restoration.
A remote Neolithic burial mound on an Orkney island may contain carvings of human eyes and eyebrows, it has been revealed.
The stone is inside the Holm of Papa Westray tomb.
Historic Scotland believes it is linked to the find of a carving believed to be Scotland’s earliest human face, dating back thousands of years.
That small Neolithic sandstone human figurine at Links of Noltland was believed to be up to 5,000 years old.
Richard Strachan, senior archaeologist with the Historic Scotland cultural resources team, said: “Initial comparisons do show a similarity in use of this eyebrow motif and may point to the possibility that the markings in the cairn are meant to show human eyebrows and eyes, as the style is very similar to the figurine.
The previous carving find was said to be of great importance
“Alternatively, we may be seeing the re-use of a motif familiar to the carver and applied to different contexts with different meaning.
“This is highly intriguing and raises yet more questions about Neolithic people’s attitudes to artistic representations of human beings.”
He added: “Images of people are very rare indeed, which some people believe suggests that it was considered taboo.
“But the discovery of the figurine shows there were some exceptions, and the lintel in the tomb may suggest that there were situations where particular features could be shown.”
The Holm of Papa Westray tomb’s remote location can only be reached by private boat hire.
Experts described the previous find of the figurine as one of “astonishing rarity”.
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/north_east/8260611.stm
Fascinating photo.....
An ancient monument in Guernsey could be fenced off because of repeated anti-social behaviour.
The Culture and Leisure Department has applied for planning permission to put up a fence around the Cists in Circle at Sandy Hook in St Sampson.
It said fly-tipping, littering, fires and moving the stones had all been problems at the site for years, and were the reason for the application.
The site, which was excavated in 1912, dates from about 2,500 to 1,800 BC.
The plans include a gate which would allow access to the site, but only with the use of a key held by Guernsey Museum.
The museum operates a similar system for several other sites, including Victoria Tower in St Peter Port.
If the plans are approved, archaeologists and historical sites staff will work to restore the ancient monument.
ARCHEOLOGISTS have unearthed evidence that a hill fort in Denbighshire is more than 3,000 years old.
An excavation of Moel y Gaer in Llanbedr, which sits on a spur off the Clwydian Range, has uncovered Iron Age remains.
But experts say parts of the site could be older than first thought after samples of metal slag and dry stone facing suggest they may date back to the Bronze Age (2,300 BC to 700 BC).
The investigation is being jointly carried out by Bangor University and Denbighshire’s Heather and Hillforts Project and new evidence indicates the possibility of earlier entrance at the hillfort.
Professor Raimund Karl, the university’s head of school and professor of archaeology and heritage, said: “We have recovered some quite substantial charcoal samples so we can try to arrange carbon dating, which should hopefully narrow down our dating range for the construction of the rampart.
“I consider the dig to have been a great success.”
Taken from The Daily Post....
dailypost.co.uk/new[...]-first-thought-55578-24585279/
[Moss, I have attached your news to this particular Moel Y Gaer as the grid reference seems to match the one you provided. If it’s still incorrect please say.
TMA Ed.]
The Guardian has gone absolutely mad on archaeology articles this morning........
A dig in Devon reveals how life was lived 3,500 years ago: from cookery to DIY
The nearest proper road is a couple of miles away. The toilet is an energetic yomp down a steep slope and through the conifers. When it rains – and here on Dartmoor it really does pelt down – the only shelter is project supervisor Simon Hughes’s old VW Golf. “It’s started to smell like a dead dog,” he says with a big grin.
Despite the tough conditions, Hughes and his team are relishing working on the Bellever roundhouse. “It’s a great project for us,” he says. “It’s a chance to really try to find out what was going on here 3,500 years ago.”
There are lots of roundhouses on Dartmoor (5,000 stone ones and more wooden ones that have rotted away without leaving any trace), but most were studied a century or more ago. They used to dig one a day then, rather than taking weeks over it as they do now.
So when two years ago a great storm felled a plantation of conifers at Bellever, disturbing the roundhouse’s granite structure, archaeologists argued that they ought to have another look. It is an exciting project: only the second roundhouse to be excavated in the area in the last 20 years and a chance to learn more about the people who, at a time when the climate was much more clement than it is now, were able to live and work here.
By the time the bronze-age people arrived on Dartmoor, the slopes had been cleared of trees so that crops could be grown and animals – cattle and sheep – grazed. Blocks of land may have been controlled by groupings of people or tribes. Some of the roundhouses have porches, protection against the weather, others seem to have been divided into rooms. Roofs built from timber may have been covered in turf, heather, gorse or thatch.
In October last year, the Dartmoor National Park Authority commissioned a small excavation here by a professional firm of consultants, AC Archaeology. Just under a quarter of the house, which has a diameter of 8m, was dug but many interesting and well-preserved features, including a mysterious nearby cairn and well-preserved paved flooring made up of granite slabs, were found.
More than 30 fragments of bronze-age pottery were recovered. Another intriguing find was a piece of worked timber, which may have formed part of the original structure.
“It blew us away,” says Andy Crabb, an archaeologist who works for the national park and for English Heritage. “Dartmoor is very wet, very acidic, so bone, ceramics, organic material gets eaten away, but here we found a whole sequence of occupation and abandonment.” In other words, evidence that people had lived there, moved on, been replaced by others. Clearly the site warranted further exploration.
Financing such a project is key. It was decided that volunteers would be used to clear the vegetation, topsoil and peat. AC Archaeology won the contract for the next stage, funded by the national park and other bodies at a cost of £7,500.
July’s nasty weather has made it a tough dig. Which is why Hughes’s car is so smelly. It’s his call when rain stops play and he admits that they tend to keep going until the point where the roundhouse is flooded and the site could get damaged. He jokes that the state of his and his co-workers’ joints is secondary.
The team, usually three or four strong, remains cheerful. “We’re like a little archaeological family,” says Kerry Dean, 24. “The banter is good and we bring cakes up sometimes to share and keep us going.”
Hughes produces a chunky piece of pottery from an old ice-cream tub. At first it looks like the kind of thing you might come across in the garden while you’re harvesting the potatoes. But, like just about everything here, it gives an intriguing glimpse into bronze-age life.
Its thickness shows it must have been part of a large bowl, and was almost certainly used for cooking. Analysis of the fragment has revealed that it is made of gabbroic clay from the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall – 100 miles away.
“We took it and showed it to a local potter,” says Crabb. “She was amazed at the quality of it. Remember they wouldn’t have had wheels. They were throwing these very large and heavy pots by hand.”
These sort of details have brought the site to life for local people. Around 600 traipsed up the rough track to the spot for an open day and, almost every day, hikers stop to look and wonder at what life was like here 3,500 years ago.
This summer’s dig has raised many more questions about how this roundhouse was used. The pottery (there are up to 69 pieces now) has been found only in one half of the structure – the half that would have enjoyed more of the sunlight. One theory is that the people spent the day in this half and slept in the other. Frustratingly, they have found no evidence of a cooking area. It may be that a smaller roundhouse nearby was the kitchen.
As they have probed further down, gone back further in time, they have found that the roundhouse was used over a period of roughly 200 years. The post holes suggest that the living space was re-ordered – ancient DIY.
The cairn remains a mystery. It seems to have been built on top of “tumble” from the wall, indicating that it was built after the roundhouse was abandoned. In Ireland, evidence of cremation or burial has been found under such structures, but not here. Clearly it was important – but the reason remains unknown.
Soon Hughes and his team will pack up their tools and head off to another site in his smelly car. The conifers will start growing again. “They’re like triffids,” says Crabb. The information they have collected will be stored away and the Bellever roundhouse and its mysteries will be left alone again.
guardian.co.uk/science/2009/aug/28/archaeology-bellever-dartmoor-bronze-age
This really is miscellaneous, but today someone sent me a photograph of a stone circle on the cliff top at Trefin Cove. It is probably a fairly modern one (though it looks real) but there is no literature for it. But some weeks ago, someone mentioned a circle in this area, so if you’re on your way to Carreg Samson, stop off at Trefin Cove and look up to the cliffs, some information would be interesting as well.
a photo; geograph.org.uk/photo/1332814