Stonehenge and the Ice Age
How much do we know about Stonehenge? Less than we think. And what has Stonehenge got to do with the Ice Age? More than we might think. This blog is mostly devoted to the problems of where the Stonehenge bluestones came from, and how they got from their source areas to the monument. Now and then I will muse on related Stonehenge topics which have an Ice Age dimension...
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....
To order, click HERE
Sunday, 12 July 2026
The Stonehenge bluestones and our heroic ancestors: time to stop flogging the dead horse
Tuesday, 7 July 2026
Prehistoric Landscape change around Preseli. New paper shows nothing new.
Prehistoric Landscape Change Around the Sources of Stonehenge’s Bluestones in Preseli, Wales
Daisy Eleanor Spencer, Karen Molloy, Mike Parker Pearson, Ralph Fyfe & Aaron Potito.
Environmental Archaeology 2025, Received 29 Apr 2025, Accepted 09 Oct 2025, Published online: 19 Oct 2025
https://doi.org/10.1080/14614103.2025.2574741
ABSTRACT
This palaeoenvironmental investigation into prehistoric landscape change was set in the Preseli region of Pembrokeshire, west Wales from where Stonehenge’s bluestones originate. It aimed to investigate whether the movement of bluestones to Stonehenge, considered to have formed Stonehenge’s first stage c. 3000 BC, was accompanied by an out-migration of people, leaving the Preseli region largely uninhabited in succeeding centuries until c. 2200 BC. Potentially, this might be reflected in the palaeoecological record by a reduction in anthropogenic land-use indicators. Detailed analyses that involved pollen, macrofossil, non-pollen palynomorph (NPP), loss-on-ignition (LOI550) and stratigraphical investigations of multipleö core sequences from heathland on the slopes of the Preseli Hills, in combination with archaeological spot samples from five prehistoric sites in the locality, were undertaken. This multi-core and multi-site approach has allowed for an interpretation of local environmental change from the Early Holocene to the Late Bronze Age. An insight into human population dynamics has been gained in an area where palaeoecological investigations have traditionally been hampered by a lack of deep peat sequences. The Mesolithic and Neolithic were largely dominated by woodland species while increases in pastoral indicators began during the Early – Middle Neolithic contemporary with activity at important bluestone sites. Significant expansion of pastoral and arable farming did not occur until the Late Bronze Age. However, despite a scarcity of archaeological remains from c. 3000–2200 BC, the presence of cereal pollen during this interval hints at a continued human presence in the landscape after the transportation of the bluestones.
Friday, 3 July 2026
The glacial transport of the bluestones: the glorious irrationality of the Stonehenge establishment
As far as I can see, the latest suggestion relating to the glacial transport of the Altar Stone from northern Scotland to the Dogger Bank has been broadly accepted by the Stonehenge archaeology establishment. At least, nobody has come out in opposition to the idea, although there have been a few murmurs about the rather fanciful Dogger Bank / Dogger Island part of the narrative.
Clarke, A. J. I., Veness, R. L. J., Kirkland, C. L., Clark, C. D., Gandy, N., Emery, A. et al. (2026) From Highlands to Henge: Refining the Provenance and Transport Pathways of Stonehenge's Altar Stone. Journal of Quaternary Science, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.70080https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jqs.70080
All things considered, the accumulated evidence shows that by 1910 the broad outlines of glaciation in the Bristol Channel / Celtic Sea arena were already established, involving thick and active ice carrying erratics and other glacial materials from the NW across Pembrokeshire and up the Bristol Channel, affecting the coasts of South Wales and the South-West Peninsula. In making his claims about the impossibility of bluestone transport towards Stonehenge HH Thomas wilfully ignored a great amount of evidence in the printed literature, and wilfully misrepresented the opinions of senior "glacialists". It is quite extraordinary that he got away with it -- but that, maybe, was because he was a geologist talking to archaeologists or antiquarians. If he had been a geologist talking to other geologists, he would certainly not have got away with it. They would have had his guts for garters.
Wednesday, 1 July 2026
Shoreline ice accumulations in the Nares Strait
Friday, 26 June 2026
The strange case of the missing Bulford post holes.......
Andy's attempts to fit assorted known pits at Bulford to a summer solstice line
I refer to a Facebook post by Andy Burnham (no, not that one --the other one) based on one of his Magalithic Portal posts. Reprinted below with acknowledgement.
I think it's fair to say that there is growing disquiet about the "summer solstice" post holes which Phil Harding claims to have found at Bulford in a dig that was completed almost a decade ago. All very mysterious. Andy is careful not to suggest, even very obliquely, that the post holes do not exist, or that Phil has simply invented them, but it's very strange that nobody noticed, at the time of the dig or at the time of the Matt Lievers report in 2021, that there were two holes bigger and different from all the others in their characteristics and which happened to lie on the (approximate) solar solstice alignment.......
Anjd why the emphasis on the exact 120m spacing? Is Phil suggesting that our clever ancestors were faliliar with the metric system of measurement?
It's too late now for anybody to go and check the evidence (which has in any case not been published) because there is now a housing estate on the site........
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A fascinating midsummer solstice story as you no doubt saw - never has more excitement been generated over some Neolithic pits due to the Stonehenge connection and the careful 'silly season' timing. A deeper dive into what we know so far. Wessex Archaeology announced...
1. an alignment of two timber posts at Bulford, 120m apart, pointed to midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset ~2950 BCE - a "prototype" solstice marker 500 years before the Stonehenge one. In the absence of the full publication I had a look at what's out there on the record.
2. This isn't a new dig. The Bulford pits were excavated in 2015-17 and published by Matt Leivers in 2021 (Internet Archaeology 56, free to read and very interesting). Linked at the end of this thread. The recent announcement seems to be a fresh reading of these same features.
3. Much was already in that paper: 48 pits on the hilltop dated ~2950 BCE, feasting debris and scatter leaning east towards Sidbury Hill. The solar interest was already on record. Even the star find. The "rare disc-shaped knife" now presented as a possible image of the sun's disc which is very easy to be sceptical about! - listed simply as "a discoidal knife" among the pit finds.
4. But here's the gap. The structure actually being announced - two posts, 120m apart, on the solstice line - isn't described in the 2021 paper at all.
5. The post features Leivers does describe at Bulford don't match it: they're several centuries later (~2470-2570 BCE, not 2950) and much closer together (the nearest large pair about 64m apart, not 120m). Presumably there is now earlier dating for the two large 'alignment' pits
6. What is rather odd is how those two large pits were missed - Phil Harding spotted them from the unpublished work.
7. I tried to find the two posts on the published plan. I can't. (See the original post). Every pit is shown as the same small dot, with 48 packed onto one hilltop. I plotted some 120m lines on the 50 degree solstice bearing - you can align this through dozens of pit pairs by chance...
8. So there's no picking the proposed aligned pair off the plan - far too many fit, and we're deliberately not proposing one. The actual two posts must have been singled out in the dig as large, deep post-holes, and that evidence just isn't on the published figure.
9. None of which makes it wrong of course - the setting is real, the date is real, the solstice bearing checks out. It's plausible and a comfortable fit with what's known - it's just running ahead of the published evidence presumably for the sake of that solstice announcement.
10. And fair play to them for getting the excitement in early - the detail is promised in a forthcoming Army Basing Programme volume (free via Wessex Archaeology's Open Library) and a Prehistoric Society piece. Until then it can't really be checked.
11. We await the publication with great interest. More on our new page for the the Bulford Neolithic Pits and Alignment which shows what must be the location for the alignment https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=63957
12. The location of the pits and alignment is close to the very nicely reconstructed henges which you can visit here: https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=60365
13. There's more in my forum post on the current gaps in the interpretation: https://www.megalithic.co.uk/modules.php?op=modload&name=Forum&file=viewtopic&topic=10434&forum=4
14. Here is the very interesting 2021 paper our pages were all based on, from Matt Leivers, which also discusses potential alignments on the Stonehenge cursus: Stonehenge and the Emergence of the Sacred Landscape of Wessex Internet Archaeology 56.
https://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue56/2/index.html
Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Why the regional marine limit (highest shoreline) is difficult to find
I came across this fabulous oblique aerial shot the other day, of part of the coast of Svalvbard. I have labelled some of the features.
In the early days of our careers, David Sugden and I became quite good at finding the regional marine limit as we hoofed around in the landscape. We discovered one marine limit at 134m in Kjove Land, East Greenland, in 1962, and then another one at the staggering altitude of 275m at Noel Hill in the South Shetland Islands in Antarctica in 1966. The altitudes were fixed with the most primitive surveying instruments coupled with barometric checks. There were no detailed maps, and no GPS instruments in those far-off days.......
In the period since we did our fieldwork, as far as we know nobody has found higher marine traces in our fieldwork areas, or corrected our altitudes.
The marine limit in a glaciated landscape subject to isostatic adjustment or tectonic uplift is notoriously difficult to find. The reason is explained in the photo above. At the end of a glacial episode, as ice wastage speeds up and as isostatic uplift kicks in, very little of the coastline is initially subject to wave attack and other coastal processes. That is becaused of the protection afforded to the coastline by a band of landfast perennial sea ice -- sometimes called the "ice foot". It's very clear in the photo. In the deepest valleys or fjords, flowing glaciers with floating snouts effectively protect coastal solid rock outcrops, and in other embayments seasonal sea ice may also afford protection. We can see this situation at the left edge of the photo.
In the photo only one small coastal stretch is in contact with the open sea -- and this is where a range of coastal processes can operate -- just for a short time if isostatic or tectonic uplift rates are high. So on the ground today we may find washed surfaces, small pebble banks or simply till deposits from which some of the finer sediments have been removed by wave action. I recall many intense discussions with Dave while we tried to piece together the clues! And because of the relatively great age of these high beach remnants, they have of course also been modified by post-glacial slope processes and frost shattering.
In the case of the South Shetland Islands, there was reasonable evidence of a short-lived ice advance over the marine shoreline traces. It was clearly not very powerful, since the traces were well preserved. Some have suggested that the "residual raised beach" that we described may be Plio-Pleistocene in age; I disagree with that, since the remnants are so close to an ice edge that they cannot possibly have survived for that long, during multiple expansions and contractions of the King George Island ice cap or indeed the regional ice sheet cover. On the other hand, away from the areas of distinct ice streaming, island ice caps can expand to cover pereviously ice-free areas and can actually protect them. So, on balance, in my 1971 paper I suggested that the Noel Hill resudual beach may well date from the last interglacial......... Eemian or Ipswichian.
Thus far, nobody, as far as I know, has managed to date these "high level" raised marine features which David and I described in our big paper in 1971........
See also:
https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2025/02/the-noel-hill-residual-raised-beach.html
https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2024/11/the-myth-of-ice-rafted-coastal-erratics.html









