Ancient people probably assembled the massive sandstone horseshoe at
Stonehenge more than 4,600 years ago, while the smaller bluestones were
imported from Wales later, a new study suggests.
The conclusion,
detailed in the December issue of the journal Antiquity, challenges
earlier timelines that proposed the smaller stones were raised first.
"The sequence proposed for the site is really the wrong way around,"
said study co-author Timothy Darvill, an archaeologist at Bournemouth
University in England. "The original idea that it starts small and gets
bigger is wrong. It starts big and stays big. The new scheme puts the
big stones at the center at the site as the first stage."
The
new timeline, which relies on statistical methods to tighten the dates
when the stones were put into place, overturns the notion that ancient
societies spent hundreds of years building each area of
Stonehenge.
Instead, a few generations likely built each of the major elements of
the site, said Robert Ixer, a researcher who discovered the origin of
the bluestones, but who was not involved in the study.
"It's a
very timely paper and a very important paper," Ixer said. "A lot of us
have got to go back and rethink when the stones arrived."
Mysterious monument
The Wiltshire, England, site of Stonehenge is one of the world's most
enduring mysteries. No one knows why prehistoric people built the
enigmatic megaliths, although researchers over the years have argued the
site was originally
a sun calendar,
a symbol of unity, or a burial monument.
Though only some of the stones remain, at the center of the site once
sat an oval of bluestones, or igneous rocks (those formed from magma)
that turn a bluish hue when wet or freshly cut. Surrounding the
bluestones are five giant sandstone megaliths called trilithons, or two
vertical standing slabs capped by a horizontal stone, arranged in the
shape of a horseshoe.
Around the horseshoe, ancient builders
erected a circular ring of bluestones. The sandstone boulders, or
sarsens, can weigh up to 40 tons (36,287 kilograms), while the much
smaller bluestones weigh a mere 4 tons (3,628 kg). [
In Photos: A Walk Through Stonehenge].
Past researchers believed the bluestone oval and circle were erected earlier than the massive sandstone horseshoe.
But when Darvill and his colleagues began excavations at the site in
2008, they found the previous chronology didn't add up. The team
estimated the age of new artifacts from the site, such as an antler-bone
pick stuck within the stones. Combining the new information with dating
from past excavations, the team created a new timeline for
Stonehenge's construction.
Like past researchers, the team believes that ancient people first used
the site 5,000 years ago, when they dug a circular ditch and mound, or
henge, about 361 feet (110 meters) in diameter.
But the new analysis suggests around 2600 B.C. the
Neolithic people
built the giant sandstone horseshoe, drawing the stone from nearby
quarries. Only then did builders arrange the much smaller bluestones,
which were probably imported from Wales. Those bluestones were then
rearranged at various positions throughout the site over the next
millennium, Darvill said.
"They sort out the local stuff first,
and then they bring in the stones from Wales to add to the complexity of
the structure," Darvill told LiveScience.
The new dating allows
the archaeologists to tie the structure to specific people who lived in
the area at the time, Darvill said. The builders of the larger
sandstone structures were pig farmers found only in the British Isles.
In contrast, the bluestone builders would've been the Beaker people,
sheep and cow herders who lived throughout Europe and are known for the
distinctive, bell-shape pottery they left behind.
The new
timeline "connects everything together, it gives us a good sequence of
events outside, and it gives us a set of cultural associations with the
different stages of construction," Darvill said.
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