The Daily Telegraph

Prehistori­c stargazers used tombs to set first calendars

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

STONE tombs could have been used as telescopes that enabled prehistori­c communitie­s to set their calendar thousands of years before Galileo, scientists have proposed.

Astronomer­s believe the impressive passage graves of the Neolithic provided a unique window from which to view the stars with unpreceden­ted clarity. Researcher­s at Nottingham Trent University and the University of Wales Trinity Saint David suggest that standing at the centre of a pitch black tomb, and looking out through the entrance, would have allowed even faint stars to become visible.

The team is currently studying 6,000-year-old graves in Carregal do Sal, Portugal, where 13 passage graves are thought to be aligned with Aldebaran, the brightest star in the constellat­ion Taurus. Dr Fabio Silva, a lecturer in Skyscapes, Cosmology and Archaeolog­y at the University of Wales, believes the appearance of Aldebaran signalled the start of the summer migration.

“To accurately time the first appearance of this star in the season, it is vital to be able to detect stars during twilight,” said Dr Silva.

“Studies have confirmed that the vast majority of passage graves in Portugal are oriented in such a way as to align with two or three stars, the most important of which was Aldebaran. It is possible that more passage graves, throughout Europe and the UK, also align to bright stars, possibly even Aldebaran. The star rising would have had a particular­ly important meaning for these communitie­s.

“Rock art and paintings, some of which are present inside similar passage graves, could and have been interprete­d as red stars, much like Aldebaran itself.”

Passage graves are a type of megalithic tomb composed of a chamber of large interlocki­ng stones, reached by a long narrow entrance.

The burial chambers are thought to have been sacred, and may have been used for rites of passage, where the initiate would spend the night inside the tomb, which was lined with the remains of the tribe’s ancestors.

 ??  ?? Newgrange passage tomb in Ireland
Newgrange passage tomb in Ireland

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom