Yes, here in just 10 main points, 350 words (max) is my new theory for how and why
Britain came to acquire Stonehenge,
Avebury, Silbury Hill, i.e. a wealth of Neolithic-era henges, standing stone circles
etc.
Specialist site for one of this science blogger's longer-term research interests. See also Shroud of Turin. |
1. In the Neolithic pre-copper, pre-Bronze age era, approx. 4,500 years ago or more, there
were no metal tools to dig graves for the dead – only antler picks.
2. There were no metal tools to cut down trees to supply
timber for cremation on funeral pyres - only flints.
3. Consequently, defleshing of the dead was standard
practice, aka ‘excarnation’. It was seen as releasing the imprisoned-soul, leaving
relatively clean bones for storage and veneration.
(Update: Friday May 6: see my latest posting with its proposal that the term "excarnation" be replaced on internet forums and media outlets generally with "skeletonization".)
4. The preferred means of excarnation was "sky burial" – exposing the bodies to scavenger birds.
5, Britain has few if any vultures. A substitute had to be
attracted. It was probably the “seagull”, better described simply as the gull, with
a voracious appetite and propensity to forage and indeed nest and reproduce far
inland.
6. A way had to be found for attracting gulls to an
excarnation site, and encouraging them to take up residence.
Gulls are not fussy eaters (seen here at rubbish dump) |
7. The first sites were man-made scars in chalk uplands, either
linear of circular, made by digging out the chalk and heaping it up at the edge
of the ditch. Seagulls were attracted to the artificial “white cliffs”, visible from afar.
A man-made henge (artist's impression). Gulls would feel at home, perched on that "cliff top". The standing stones were a later de luxe feature. |
8. The tops of the “cliffs” provide perches for the gulls
with some early warning of the approach of predators (foxes etc). Those “man-made” cliffs are what today we
call “henges” etc (“cursus” too).
9. The next step was for the guardians of excarnation sites
to install tall timber posts, moving the perches closer to the centre of the
henge or cursus, closer to the laid-out offerings.
10. The final step was to replace the timber posts with
standing stones, durable bird perches, no more, no less.
The rest is detail, like:
(a) adding lintel cross-pieces onto Stonehenge to
extend the perching area, like:
(b) initially preferring igneous Welsh bluestone
over local sarsen sandstone (easier to keep clean), like:
(c) building barrows to house excarnated bones, with or
without a final ‘cleansing’ cremation, like:
(d) building Silbury Hill in small
instalments, maybe as a repository for a token soft-tissue interment (probably
the heart?).
See previous postings on this and my “Sussing Stonehenge site (see home page banner above) for how these ideas evolved organically via small incremental steps.
Sadly, from a time-and-motion study perspective, they did not arrive in a sudden flash of inspiration.
Update: Tue May 3
Have just placed this comment on the splendid Ancient-Origins site, regarding its recent coverage of the 'mysterious' Korean dolmens. (How silly of me to have overlooked dolmens thus far, given they can be seen as key intermediaries between single standing stones and Stonehenge's lintelled trilithons - think transition from bird perch to bird table!):
One of the 10 comments to date accuses the writer of "gruesome, baseless speculation" presumably a reference to the brief (very brief!) mention of sky burial.
One suspects there's a lot more of that kind of sentiment out there. It's understandable I guess, but is a sad reflection all the same on the lack of scientific objectivity that exists out there...
Update: Tue May 3
Have just placed this comment on the splendid Ancient-Origins site, regarding its recent coverage of the 'mysterious' Korean dolmens. (How silly of me to have overlooked dolmens thus far, given they can be seen as key intermediaries between single standing stones and Stonehenge's lintelled trilithons - think transition from bird perch to bird table!):
-
Reply to: Looking for the Origins of the Mysterious Dolmens of Korea
Comment Author: Colin BerryOops. This handy feature on Korean dolmens seems to have led to what optimistically might be called the Rosetta Stone of stone circles!
Simply googling (dolmen sky burial) led to a 2011 article in Popular Archaeology detailing the work of Dr.Rami Arav on a series of concentric circles assembled from loose basalt stones in the Golan Heights with a single dolmen at the centre.
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/september-2011/article/solving-the-mystery-of-a-megalithic-monument-in-the-land-of-giants
Spot the parallels with the henges of England with excavated ditches supplying chalk banks on which birds can perch. Spot the links between standing stones bridged by cross piece lintels (dolmens or geometrically equivalent but megalithic Stonehenge trilithons) making a bigger and better perch for birds (“bird table” in effect). Then compare what Arav has to say regarding excarnation (via sky burial”) and what I have said in my most recent posting:
http://colinb-sciencebuzz.blogspot.fr/2016/04/how-britain-came-to-possess-stonehenge.html
Yup, I think it’s no exaggeration to state that Arav’s stone circles with central dolmen are the Rosetta Stone which point to excarnation being international common practice in the pre-Bronze Age – from England, to the Middle East to Korea!
Excuse me while I pick up all the scales that have recently fallen from an ageing pair of eyes! When’s English Heritage going to stop introducing Stonehenge in its tourist guide as a “temple”, channelling thought and speculation into scientifically-unproductive channels? Always look first for a utilitarian role first where Neolithic re-arranging of heavy stone is concerned – especially when megalithic...
One of the 10 comments to date accuses the writer of "gruesome, baseless speculation" presumably a reference to the brief (very brief!) mention of sky burial.
One suspects there's a lot more of that kind of sentiment out there. It's understandable I guess, but is a sad reflection all the same on the lack of scientific objectivity that exists out there...
2 comments:
The photograph of the seagull on the post against the orange sky is my copyrighted photograph. I do not have a record of licensing this photograph for use on this blog. Please contact me at patty.hankins@gmail.com to arrange for a license for this image
I have just spotted the above comment (it apparently having evaded the email notification of new comments). The offending image has been removed.
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