THE BOOK
Some of the ideas discussed in this blog are published in my new book called "The Stonehenge Bluestones" -- available by post and through good bookshops everywhere. Bad bookshops might not have it....
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Wednesday, 27 August 2025

The fantasy of the Pembrokeshire cow




The sacred cow -- was she called Myfanwy, or Buttercup?


I have been reading this notorious article even more carefully in he hope of finding some clue as to the origin of the "Pembrokeshire cow."  I am stumped, because I can find nothing at all to support the assertions made in the BGS press release:

https://www.bgs.ac.uk/news/scientists-uncover-secrets-of-stonehenges-mysterious-cattle/
BGS news
Scientists uncover secrets of Stonehenge’s mysterious cattle
Cutting-edge analysis of a Neolithic cow tooth dating back to the construction of the famous landmark provides evidence of Welsh origins.
20/08/2025 By BGS Press

This is the offending article by Evans et al (2025)
Sequential multi-isotope sampling through a Bos taurus tooth from Stonehenge, to assess comparative sources and incorporation times of strontium and lead
Journal of Archaeological Science 180 (2025) 106269
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440325001189?via%3Dihub

The strontium isotope evidence is supposedly most reliable in demonstrating the geographical location of an animal's initial grazing area.  However, the results in this study are not easy to interpret.  Quote:

Using the isotope biosphere map (Evans et al., 2022a), the theoretical higher winter value of 0.7144 excludes most of SE England and southern Scotland. The lower summer theoretical value of 0.7110 has a similar, but higher, spatial coverage to the sample regions at the winter value (i.e. excluding most of SE England). These distributions are based on using the central 90 % model option recommended for herbivores (Evans et al., 2022a) (Fig. 4).

So the most that can be said is that the work excludes most of SE England as the animal's "source area."  There are vast areas in the west and north of Great Britain, and in the Midlands, that by their own admission cannot be excluded by the authors of the paper........

Regarding the tooth in the jawbone of the said cow, its provenance is also said to be shown in the measurements of the lead isotopes.

Quote:

This model requires a disconnect between the geological sources of Sr and Pb such that the Sr can be modelled as a two-end member transition down the tooth whereas the Pb source switches twice between Mesozoic and Palaeozoic sources without disrupting the Sr curve. While this model is not discarded it is difficult to model geologically (i.e. it is difficult to identify source zones that could explain this pattern). 3) The disconnect could be caused by the release of previously deposited Pb due to physiological stress.

So this all hinges on the difference between the signatures of Mesozoic and Palaeozoic sources, shown in the following map of "isoscapes":


Broadly, the dark brown area consists mostly of Mesozoic and later rocks while the lighter brown area -- for example in Wales and southern Scotland -- coincides with Palaeozoic rocks to the south of the Iapetus Suture.

The problem with the 8 lead isotope readings for the cow's tooth is that 4 of them fall within the Palaeozoic range and 4 are within the Mesozoic range:

So I can see why the authors are puzzled by the "switching" from one apparent provenance to another. As they say, something else is going on here, unrelated to geographical location.  But then it gets even more bizarre, when we look at this strange diagram.  


The diagram shows that none of the lead isotope readings falls within the data range for Wales. On the other hand there is a reasonable matching for samples from the Pennines, Mendips and SW England,

And yet, having shown that there is NOT a good match for Wales, the authors (not in the article but in the press release) go on to state that the famous cow has probably come from SW Wales.  So they are promoting a narrative that they thelselves have effectively already dismissed........

As far as I can see, the ONLY reason for claiming that the cattle tooth came from an animal raised in SW Wales is that that is where most of the bluestones originated.  Hmmm......

Parker Pearson refers to "yet more fascinating evidence for Stonehenge’s link with south-west Wales, where its bluestones come from".  Evans refers to "the first evidence of cattle movement from Wales" amd Madgwick talks of "unparalleled new detail on the distant origins of the animal and the arduous journey it was brought on". 

We are repeatedly told that we must follow the science.  If this is science, God help us all. 























Thursday, 21 August 2025

The BGS -- off to dreamland with the tooth fairy

 

Photo of a cow's tooth....... not the one used in the study

Well, it is the silly seaon, and we expect assorted bits of nonsense to be making the headlines.  What we don't expect is to find an august (and supposedly very scientific) body like the British Geological Survey (BGS) at the centre of a piece of pseudo-science, promoting it heavily to a gullible media.

The big story today (in the Guardian, Mail, and Independent) has been promoted by the BGS press office, which is presumably accepted by all editors as highly reliable and respectable source.  The press release, reproduced below, is quite extraordinary and highly irresponsible.

The story is all about the analysis of a single cattle tooth, taken from a cow's jawbone found near the "entrance" to Stonehenge in 1924.  According to legend, this jawbone was "carefully placed" and was therefore of great significance.  Now where have we heard that sort of thing before?

Let's just make this point.  The article which is being hyped here is a rather dry and dusty one, of interest to those who are keen on cow's teeth, but it provides no evidence whatsoever that the famous cow which might have spent some of its time in an area of older rocks had anything  to do with Wales, let alone Pembrokeshire and let alone the Mynydd Preseli area.  The article itself makes no extravagant claims,  but it is seized on by Evans, Parker Pearson and Madgwick who pretend that it makes some major contribution to the "established" Stonehenge bluestone narrative.

It's all completely bonkers.

================

BGS news
https://www.bgs.ac.uk/news/scientists-uncover-secrets-of-stonehenges-mysterious-cattle/

Scientists uncover secrets of Stonehenge’s mysterious cattle


Cutting-edge analysis of a Neolithic cow tooth dating back to the construction of the famous landmark provides evidence of Welsh origins.

20/08/2025 By BGS Press


The mysteries of Stonehenge have baffled scientists for centuries. In the 2010s, archaeologists and geologists identified two quarries in Wales as the sources of Stonehenge’s legendary standing bluestones. Now, new evidence published by scientists in August 2025 consolidates this connection.

A century ago, in 1924, archaeologists discovered a cow’s jawbone that had been carefully placed beside Stonehenge’s south entrance and dated it to the monument’s very beginning in 2995 to 2900 BCE. The discovery has intrigued historians ever since. Why had it been placed there? Why was this animal considered special? Researchers from BGS, Cardiff University and University College London have used isotope analysis to bring this artifact to life, helping to reveal further tantalising glimpses into the origins of the historic landmark.The scientists sliced the cow’s third molar tooth, which records chemical signals from the animal’s second year of life, into nine horizontal sections. They were then able to measure carbon, oxygen, strontium and lead isotopes, which each offer clues about the cow’s diet, environment and movement.

The oxygen isotopes revealed that the tooth captured roughly six months of growth, from winter to summer, whilst the carbon isotopes showed the animal’s diet changed with the seasons: woodland fodder in winter and open pasture in summer. Additionally, the strontium isotopes indicated the seasonal food sources came from different geological areas, suggesting that the cow either moved seasonally or that winter fodder was imported.

The lead isotopes revealed composition spikes during the late winter to spring, pointing to a lead source that was older than the lead in the rest of the tooth. The composition suggests the cow originated from an area with Palaeozoic rocks, such as the bluestones found in Wales, before moving to Stonehenge.
This is the first time that scientists have seen evidence linking cattle remains from Stonehenge to Wales, adding further weight to theories that cows were used in the transportation of the enormous rocks across the country.

This study has revealed unprecedented details of six months in a cow’s life, providing the first evidence of cattle movement from Wales as well as documenting dietary changes and life events that happened around 5000 years ago. A slice of one cow tooth has told us an extraordinary tale and, as new scientific tools emerge, we hope there is still more to learn from her long journey.

Prof Jane Evans, BGS Honorary Research Associate.

In addition to this discovery, researchers also concluded that the unusual lead signal could not be explained by local contamination or movement alone. Instead, there was another explanation: that lead stored in the cow’s bones had been remobilised during the stresses of pregnancy. If true, this would mean the cow was female and pregnant or nursing during the tooth’s formation. To test the hypothesis, the team applied a peptide-based sex determination technique at the University of Manchester, which showed there was a high probability that the animal was female.

This research has provided key new insights into the biography of this enigmatic cow whose remains were deposited in such an important location at a Stonehenge entrance. It provides unparalleled new detail on the distant origins of the animal and the arduous journey it was brought on. So often grand narratives dominate research on major archaeological sites, but this detailed biographical approach on a single animal provides a brand-new facet to the story of Stonehenge.

Richard Madgwick, professor of archaeological science at Cardiff University.

Stonehenge has many secrets left to be uncovered. However, this latest research helps fill in just a few more of those gaps as we learn more about this legendary landmark.

This is yet more fascinating evidence for Stonehenge’s link with south-west Wales, where its bluestones come from. It raises the tantalising possibility that cattle helped to haul the stones.

Michael Parker Pearson, professor of British later prehistory 
at University College London.

The research paper, Sequential multi-isotope sampling through a Bos taurus tooth from Stonehenge, to assess comparative sources and incorporation times of strontium and lead, is now available to read.

========================

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440325001189?via%3Dihub


Abstract
The aim of this paper is to use the sequential nature of enamel deposition in hypsodont teeth to study the relationship, in time and source, of strontium and lead isotopes to better understand the use of this pairing of elements for studies of movement and migration. Carbon and oxygen isotope analysis were included to place the data in their seasonal and dietary context. The study was undertaken on an M3 from a Neolithic cattle tooth excavated from Stonehenge. The animal was female based on peptide analysis. The tooth records c. six months of enamel deposition from winter to summer, based on δ18OcarbVSMOW compositions, and changes in δ13CcarbVSMOW that reflect a shift from forest to grassland food sources. 87Sr/86Sr varies from a winter value of 0.7144 to 0.7110 in summer. Lead concentrations and isotope composition shows peaks and troughs which contrast with the unidirectional change in the 87Sr/86Sr. We suggest that whereas the Sr is wholly derived from dietary sources the Pb represents a balance between diet and skeletal reservoirs, the latter being scavenged during a time of metabolic stress attributed to calving and lactation. It is thus important to consider skeletal reservoirs as a source of Pb when using this element to track movement and migration. This study demonstrates the value of using the complementary isotope systems of lead and strontium in tandem, but also highlights that their integration must be undertaken with caution and with full consideration of alternative drivers of variation.

-----------------------

The wildly extravagant claims made by Evans, Madgwick and Parker Pearson in the press release are quite at odds with the contents of the paper.  In fact the text urges caution in the interpretation of the isotope analyses, warning against over-interpretation and against the assumption that the seasonal changes found in the tooth have anything at all to do with migration or travel over large distances.  The changes suggest a dietary change from woodland to grassland, which suggests that the animal might have moved between one season or another -- or alternatively that woodland fodder was collected by humans and moved to the animal when grass was in short supply in the winter.  The strontium and lead isotope "signatures" certainly do not suggest a west Wales source, and could just as well be associated with an animal that was grazing at one time in Devon or Cornwall, or even in the Mendips.




Quote from the text:

This study has revealed some important considerations when looking at multi-isotope variation in tooth enamel. By linking the changes in carbon and oxygen with those in strontium we can see that the Sr isotope terrain changes are related to vegetation type and seasonality and while the shift in Sr from c. 0.7144 to <0.711 might previously have been see as indication a significant migratory event, new studies show that this could be either localized movement or simply movement of feed rather that the animal itself. The discrepancies between strontium (unidirectional composition change down the tooth) and Pb isotope composition (peaks and troughs) highlights the different metabolic pathways of Sr and Pb and show that care must be taken, if the two isotopes are used together as a migration tracker, to ensure that both isotopes are monitoring coeval and consanguineous isotope sources. Finally, fluctuations in Pb concentration and isotope composition may be indicative of birth induced skeletal stress in female animals.

How anybody can interpret that as indicating that the cow travelled to Stonehenge from SW Wales, goodness knows..........












Monday, 18 August 2025

Hubris instead of science



If you want to know what "Hubris" means, just watch the infamous documentary about the Lost Circle, featuring MPP and many of his merry men and women, egged on by an "astonished" Alice Roberts. (it is still being pushed via BBC iPlayer, in spite of -- or maybe because of -- protests about the appalling level of the "science" nvoilved.)  Some clips from the documentary were shown by Coral and Jacky in their YouTube video about the Bluestone Debate.  The trouble with the brand of hubris promoted by the HTG (Human Transport Gang) is that it is dressed up as science, which means that it is much more likely to be picked up and perpetrated as "the truth" by an increasingly gullible media.  

Members of the gang have, over the past fifteen years or so, not been very backward in coming forward and telling the world how important their research is. They don't do modesty or caution.   Superlatives have flowed as freely as water.  The most accurate piece of geological monolith provenancing ever seen in the British Isles. The biggest, best and earliest Neolithic stone quarries.  The longest list of Neolithic stone quarrying "engineering features" ever assembled.  The most technically advanced and longest stone haulage expeditions ever attempted in the western world.  The best evidence ever produced to show where one particular Stonehenge monolith (which, by the way, has never been found) came from on a quarry rock face.  The clearest imprint ever found of a Stonehenge stone that was used in an earlier stone setting.  The second biggest stone circle ever found in Britain.  The site of "proto-Stonehenge" !!  The discovery of one of the greatest religious and political centres of Neolithic Britain..........  

So it goes on.  Extravagant media headlines of the "Stonehenge mystery finally resolved" variety, with many capitral letters, bold typefaces and exclamation marks.  All fuelled by carefully crafted press releases and quotes from senior researchers (called "experts" or "scientists") associated with top British Universities.  All wildly over the top, all based on extremely shaky evidence, and recently abandoned bit by bit under the pressure of scrutiny by independent researchers and sceptical members of the public.

Fast forward to the past month, and the paper on the Newall Boulder published by Bevins et al in the Journal of Archaeological Science.  I will dissect this paper with due objectivity in due course, but for a moment, just concentrate on the  outrageous claims made by the authors in press releases and statements to the media. They talk of "discoveries", "finds" and "new evidence" -- and claim to be "correcting the record" -- implying that they are bringing science to bear on a debate that was previously somewhat unscientific.  The debate is now  settled by our truth, say the scientists.  Then they claim (falsely, of course)  that "there is no evidence" to support the idea of glacial transport of bluestone erratics.  So we have claims of "the death of the glacial transport hypothesis" by at least one of the joint authors, and "human transport finally confirmed".........

Among the adjectives used by correspondents to describe the recent paper, we get the following:  arrogant.  disrespectful, insensitive, condescending, insulting, and complacent.  But what gets most people is the sheer arrogance of the eleven authors who seem to assume that this is the last word, and that I for one will have to accept defeat and go away, leaving Bevins et al in sole charge of the playing field.  No chance of that.  The eleven authors seem to have been incredibly naive and blind to the fact that their own evidence -- and their convoluted bluestone narrative --  has  no strong evidence to support it.  Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence to back them up and that evidence is just not there.  Bevins et al do not appear to know how science works.  They have not corrected the record at all -- they have expressed  opinions on several relevant matters, and to claim anything more grandiose than that is simply to demonstrate that hubris is alive and well..  

Friday, 15 August 2025

A healthy dose of scepticism




I have been looking again at the two YouTube videos created by Coral and Jacky Henderson and published on their CoralJackZ pages.

Here are the links:

Part 1:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GoobiRgv50g


Part 2:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idbEst34aEw&t


The videos were released last year and have tremendous viewing figures -- and I'm very impressed with the understated and cautious approach taken by Jacky in his presentation. His scepticism is commendable! Compare that with the extraordinary hype contained in that infamous TV documentary about the "Lost Circle"...... and with other videos now on YouTube which accept without any scrutiny  the wacky narrative promoted by Richard Bevins, Mike Parker Pearson and others over the last few years.

The thing I am most impressed by (having now had another look at the 2024 videos) is the level of research that has gone into the split screen sections.  Without any prompting from me, they have dug around in the literature and found illustrations to back up the points made by me in Part 2 and by my opponents as well.  I'm rather gratified to see that none of their research has revealed major shortcomings in the things that I said to camera.

If the comments made by viewers are anything to go by, many others have also given a warm welcome to this rather refreshing approach......


===============


PS.  If you want to know my take on the Altar Stone provenancing debate, there is a 15 min section in video No 2, from 28.51 to 42.02.  My comments, as far as I know, have not been overtaken by events.






Tuesday, 12 August 2025

Fluvioglacial gravels in Cardigan


There is a new exposure of horizontally bedded fluvioglacial sand and gravel in Cardigan, where a hillside has been excavated out to ctreate a flat platform suitable for a new retail shopping park.  One store has been built there already by Home Bargains Ltd, and a new Aldi store will soon follow on the site.

The site is north of the river, not far from Theatr Mwldan and the new NHS Integrated Care Health Centre.

Grid reference -- SN 17566 46664

The exposed face is 15- 20m high, and having been cut a few years ago it is already colonised by sand martins and is starting to degrade.  But if anybody wants to take some samples for OSL dating, there are enough vertical faces left in easily accessible positions.

The OSL dates obtained by Glasser et al (2018) from Trefigin and Pantgwyn quarries, both to the south of the Teifi River, were around 26,000 yrs BP, suggesting that the ice of the Irish Sea Ice Stream was disintegrating in the lower Teifi Valley at a relatively early date -- in turn suggesting a glacial maximum around 28,000 - 27,000 yrs BP.  The dates may or may not be reliable.........

Glasser, N.F. et al, Late Devensian deglaciation of south-west Wales from luminescence and cosmogenic isotope dating: LATE DEVENSIAN DEGLACIATION OF SOUTH-WEST WALES
August 2018
Journal of Quaternary Science 33(2)
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.3061

Sunday, 10 August 2025

My Response to Daw's Desperate Diatribe



Reports of the death of the glacial transport theory are greatly exaggerated

I can put up with Tim Daw posting a stream of personal insults aimed at me on his own blog, which is read by his own enthusiastic followers, but I will not accept an ad hominem attack from him which is published on the Researchgate platform, posing as a learned article.  He even asked Researchgate to change the typeface at the head of the article,  to make it look as if it was extracted from an academic journal. Cheap stunt.   I'm amazed that Researchgate accepted it, given that it contains no scientific content whatsoever,  and that it is simply a gleeful celebration of what he perceives to be the death of the glacial transport theory. 

If Daw and his mates from within the Stonehenge establishment think that I am now going to shut up and go away, they have another thing coming.  And if they really think that the "transport debate" is now definitively concluded, that shows how little they understand about the scientific process. 

I wonder what Daw's colleagues think of the  endless stream of ill-considered attacks on his blog?  Not a lot, I suspect.  He is a considerable embarrassment.  Anyway, here is my response, also on Researchgate:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/394423030_The_Stonehenge_bluestones_reports_of_the_death_of_the_glacial_transport_theory_are_grossly_exaggerated

Joint controlled blocks -- statements of the obvious

 

One of the Kjove Land giant erratics in East Greenland.  To call this a "joint controlled block" might or might not be accurate, but the term tells us nothing of importance about its origins.


To call a small clast or larger boulder a "joint controlled block" is to make a statement of the obvious, since the term can be applied to virtually all lumps of rock in nature.  I have come across the term several times recently, in the context of the bluestone monoliths of Stonehenge and the Newall Boulder......

https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/502372/1/WD-94-7.pdf

When bedrock breaks up, under the influence of weathering and erosive forces, it will always break along the planes or lines of weakness within the rock mass -- and these may coincide with bedding planes, faults, shear fractures  or simple joints caused by internal stresses such as drying out, cooling, contraction or compaction.  The term "brittle failure" is often used. Geologists also refer to fractures, fissures and planar or sub-planar joints, and also "cleavage" to describe splitting in metamorphic rocks such as slate.   Pressure release is one process that can create both vertical and horizontal jointing and slope failure.  I have talked about this in association with glacial erosional processes.  On a large scale regional tectonic forces can also be involved.  Whatever the scale, tensile stress is the thing......

Bedding planes and foliations are not the same as joints, but differences in texture and mineral arrangements might be sufficient for stresses to develop within the rock and to result in parallel or sub-parallel joints.

The only chunks of rock that can NOT be referred to as natural "joint controlled blocks" are massive rocks split with the ancient "wedge and feathers" method (involving the drilling of lines of holes) or rocks cut with a diamond saw -- so we can forget about those with respect to the Neolithic!!

Glacially eroded facets may or may not coincide with joints in a clast.  It all depends how a clast is positioned with respect to the flowing or abrading medium -- in this case, moving ice.

So to refer to a clast -- whether in a Stonehenge context or not -- as a "joint controlled block" tells me virtually nothing about it, although it might sound terribly scientific.  When I see a faceted or striated clast with abraded edges, gouges and chatter marks or other percussion fractures, I will continue to call it a glacial erratic if it is not locally derived, paying due respect to the processes that are at work in our environment. Geology gets us so far, but not far enough for a geomorphologist.

 Let's just call a spade a spade.........


The Newall Boulder -- to call it a "joint controlled block" is to miss almost everything significant about its appearance and its origins