Western Daily Press

‘ON BRINK OF GIVING UP’

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ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS were “almost on the brink of giving up” when they made their “astonishin­g” discovery about Stonehenge, TV scientist Professor Alice Roberts has said.

Experts believe that “they may have recovered the true origins” of the ancient monument.

It is now thought that Stonehenge’s smaller bluestones originally formed an even older, long-lost monument in the Preseli Hills in Pembrokesh­ire, Wales.

Prof Roberts presents a BBC programme,

which followed archaeolog­ists over years of digs and a decade of research.

Professor Mike Parker Pearson’s findings now show “that the original stones of Britain’s most iconic monument had a previous life”.

Professor Roberts said the archaeolog­ists “were always up against it”.

She said of their research and digging: “They had a terrible time. They’ve been doing this for about 10 years. They looked in lots of different places and didn’t find anything.

“They were almost on the brink of giving up and then they looked at this particular place called Waun Mawn.”

The site had previously been described as “doubtful and insignific­ant”.

But “they decided that they were going to dig anyway and just see if they can find anything, and they found these ghosts of stone holes...”

She added: “And they were exactly the same diameter as the outer circle at Stonehenge.

“It’s just unbelievab­le stuff, unbelievab­le archaeolog­y.”

And Prof Roberts quipped:

“On the one hand it shows that Stonehenge is a second-hand monument!

“It wasn’t set up there originally. It was set up in West Wales.”

The former star said the find was “the most exciting archaeolog­y around Stonehenge that’s certainly happened during my lifetime”.

The presenter added: “It is incredibly exciting.

“When I first heard about it, I didn’t believe it at all.”

The presenter said: “Of course there are questions about why these stones would have been brought from West Wales to Salisbury Plain ... but ultimately it’s pre-history and we don’t know...

“Very often in pre-history we’re left asking those questions and I don’t think we’ll ever know because we just don’t have any written record.”

Archaeolog­ists used 3D scanning techniques, traditiona­l field archaeolog­y, and laboratory analysis to discover when and where the stones for Stonehenge were quarried and where they first stood.

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