Romancing the Stones
Who built the great megaliths and stone circles of Great Britain, and why? Researchers continue to puzzle and marvel over these age-old questions
- By David Roberts
- Smithsonian.com, July 01, 2002, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Taylor invited me to touch the log. It felt like a cooked mushroom. "You could take it out with your fingernail," she said, putting it back in the water. Once the timbers have been studied, they will be sprayed with fixative chemicals.
In the meantime, the Seahenge discovery underscores the notion that for all the permanence of stone monuments, equally magnificent monuments crafted out of wood once spread from one end of Britain to the other: wooden tombs, timber circles, standing timbers carved with intricate designs—all vanished but for their vacant postholes.
Almost a year after Taylor and her group excavated Seahenge, I drove up the Norfolk coast to talk to local villagers about the excavation. "I played on that beach when I was 8 or 9; I'm 68 now," retired builder and fisherman Geoffrey Needham told me between sips of lager at the Whitehorse Pub in Holme-nextthe- Sea. "As long as I can remember, that big oak stump has been sticking out. They should have left it. The shifting sands would have covered it up. It would come and go as always." Needham showed me a postcard of Seahenge made from a photograph taken by his sister Wendy George that he said many of the protesters still carry with them like a talisman. Back in London, I told English Heritage's David Miles about my conversation in the pub. Miles said he thought it unlikely that Needham could have seen the oak stump as a child; the timbers were exposed only a few years ago. (In all likelihood Seahenge had been built some distance inland. Four thousand years of eroding, crashing waves had brought the seashore to the monument.)
"I see it as a sacred space," Miles went on. "There are anthropological parallels in which an upside-down tree serves as a channel into the underworld and the heavens. Trees blasted by lightning were said to be ‘chosen by the gods.' " Miles looked at the postcard, then smiled a rueful smile common to archaeologists confronted by mysteries about the past. "But of course we really don't know.
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Comments (3)
I was very excited by the braided honeysuckle rope find. However... "...the first evidence of tool use ever found in Britain." This statement is simply not true. The use and manufacturing of tools is well represented in British prehistory and goes back about 500,000 years. The upper paleolithic Creswellian Industry is one example. The flint mines of Grimes Graves were in use from about 3000 BC to 1900 BC -- the cited Seahenge example from the article falls near the end of its usage. Perhaps what was meant was 'metal' tool use, but that certainly wasn't what was written. Also, state-of-theart should read state-of-the-art and WiltshireCounty should be Wiltshire County.
Posted by SA on October 20,2012 | 05:44 PM
"Exactly how people with neither metal nor the wheel were capable of quarrying"
From "The early British Tin Industry, Chapter 2: Tinworking from prehistory until 1066"
p15: "Detailed electron probe analysis of European bronzes has led Northover to suggest that 'the number of metal sources was very limited, and there was often only one' "... " For the early bronze age, Northover has noted that tin bronzes were probably exclusively produced in Britain from South-Western cassiterite."
p14 "By contrast, on Dartmoor and to a lesser extent on Fowelymore there was no systematic reworking of the earlier steamworks and as a result, the artefacts were not exposed. On a positive note, this probably means that the evidence for early activity still remains on these moors."
So metal, and particulalry tin, appear to have been available to the neolithic peoples of this region at the time it was built.
For a new technically based theorum on Stonehenge see http://www.heavenshenge.com
Posted by Tans on November 21,2011 | 03:59 AM
I found this article very fascinating. i am 45yrs old now and i remember the timbers at holme-next-sea beieng exposed yrs ago when i was a child of before my teens. So the expert David Miles sat behind his desk who probably has never visited Holme, opinion counts for nothing! yours C Lee
Posted by C Lee on May 21,2008 | 03:52 PM