The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Fife experts help unearth secrets of Stonehenge

ST ANDREWS: Academics in ‘astonishin­g discovery’ of unique Neolithic structure

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Scientists at St Andrews University have helped unearth the secrets of Stonehenge with the discovery of a never before seen Neolithic structure.

A team including Fife academics discovered huge prehistori­c shafts which form a circle around Durrington Walls in Wiltshire, which they believed formed a “sacred boundary” near Stonehenge, the country’s most famous stone circle.

The “sacred” circle is more than a mile in diameter and no other Neolithic structure discovered to date covers such a large area.

Coinciding with the summer solstice, which is linked with Stonehenge because the stones are lined up with the movements of the sun, it has been described as an “astonishin­g discovery”.

Dr Nick Snashall, National Trust archaeolog­ist for the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site, said: “As the place where the builders of Stonehenge lived and feasted, Durrington Walls is key to unlocking the story of the wider Stonehenge landscape, and this astonishin­g discovery offers us new insights into the lives and beliefs of our Neolithic ancestors.

“The Hidden Landscapes team have combined cutting-edge, archaeolog­ical fieldwork with good old-fashioned detective work to reveal this extraordin­ary discovery and write a whole new chapter in the story of the Stonehenge landscape.”

Fieldwork and analysis revealed evidence for 20 or more prehistori­c shafts, more than 32ft in diameter and 16ft deep. Using radiocarbo­n dating, the researcher­s estimated the shafts were excavated more than 4,500 years ago, around the time that Durrington Walls was constructe­d.

Dr Richard Bates from the school of earth and environmen­tal sciences at

St Andrews University said: “Seeing what is unseen: Yet again, the use of a multidisci­plinary effort with remote sensing and careful sampling is giving us an insight to the past that shows an even more complex society than we could ever imagine.

“Clearly sophistica­ted practices demonstrat­e that the people were so in tune with natural events to an extent that we can barely conceive in the modern world we live in today.”

The boundary of the newly discovered structure appears to have been deliberate­ly laid out to include an earlier prehistori­c monument – the Larkhill Causewayed Enclosure.

This site was built more than 1,500 years before the henge at Durrington.

Archaeolog­ists believe the effort invested in the circuit inscribed by the pits reflects an important cosmologic­al link between the two ritual sites.

And researcher­s said it is evidence that the early inhabitant­s of Britain used a tally or counting system to track pacing across long distances.

The research involved experts from St Andrews, Birmingham and Warwick universiti­es, the University of Wales Trinity Saint David, and the Scottish Universiti­es Environmen­tal Research Centre based at Glasgow University.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Stonehenge, the famous Wiltshire landmark.
Picture: PA. Stonehenge, the famous Wiltshire landmark.

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