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Stonehenge was an ancient hunting hotspot

- WORDS JONATHAN GORDON

Long before Neolithic people erected Stonehenge’s majestic bluestones and sarsen stones, Mesolithic, or Middle Stone Age hunter-gatherers frequented the site, using it as a hunting ground. Later, farmers and monument builders moved into the region. Older research had suggested that before Stonehenge was built, the surroundin­g landscape included a closed-canopy forest. “There has been a long-running debate as to whether the monumental archaeolog­y of Stonehenge was created in an uninhabite­d forested landscape or whether it was constructe­d in an already partly open area of pre-existing significan­ce to late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers,” the researcher­s wrote.

Now, new research shows that the area was historical­ly an open woodland where large herbivores such as aurochs, an extinct cattle species, once grazed. Given the site’s high use over time, it’s likely that there was continuity between the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers and the Neolithic, or New Stone Age monument builders, the researcher­s said. In other words, it’s not as if Stonehenge’s builders suddenly ‘discovered’ the site for the first time; rather, it appears that people had known about this spot for centuries.

An early form of Stonehenge was built about 5,000 years ago, while the famous stone circle that still stands today was put together in the late Neolithic, around 2500 BCE Salisbury Plain, the plateau where Stonehenge sits, was considered a sacred area by ancient people and holds evidence of older structures dating back as far back as 10,500 years ago. The study centred around Blick Mead, an early huntergath­erer spot on the edge of the Stonehenge World Heritage Site. Previous excavation­s of Blick Mead confirmed that Mesolithic people settled there prior to 8000 BCE, and the new research suggests humans continued to use this area into the Neolithic period.

To investigat­e Blick Mead, Samuel Hudson, a researcher at the University of Southampto­n, and colleagues dug a newly opened trench at the site and analysed ancient pollen, spores and DNA, as well as animal remains, found within the samples to learn more about how ancient people used the land during the late Mesolithic, between 5200 and 4700 BCE. Their analysis revealed the area used to have damp meadow conditions that sat next to an open grassland with a deciduous woodland close by. Wild animals would have grazed in those open fields, and hunter-gatherer communitie­s that lived there 4,000 years prior to Stonehenge’s constructi­on would have hunted the grazers.

“The Stonehenge World Heritage Site is globally recognised for its rich Neolithic and Bronze Age monumental landscape, but little is known of its significan­ce to Mesolithic population­s,” said the study’s authors. But now it’s clear that “hunter-gatherers had already chosen part of this landscape, an alluvial clearing, as a persistent place for hunting and occupation.”

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