Christophe Snoeck, lead author of the study
We now all know about the wild and wacky media coverage of the new research on the strontium isotope ratios in cremated bones from Stonehenge -- but how did the absurd West Wales / Rhosyfelin / Carn Goedog component get into the story, given that the research actually provided no evidence whatsoever in support of any link between Salisbury Plain and Preseli?
Thanks to Andy Burnham for flagging up the press releases that prompted the media coverage. I reproduce the two key items below -- one from the Nature press office and the other from the Oxford University press office. Very instructive indeed. What is really interesting is that the Nature press release is short, cool and rather circumspect -- it mentions West Wales, but with no great enthusiasm. I suspect that whoever wrote it was not at all convinced by the stuff about bluestones and quarries, and would have preferred a paper based on facts instead of fantasies........
The OU press release or "news item" is very different. It is full of unsupportable contentions and misrepresentations of the actual laboratory research, and I suspect that it was not written by an independent press officer but by some of those who had vested interests in dragging bluestones and quarries into the story. The key names are obviously Mike Parker Pearson, Rick Schulting, Christophe Snoeck and John Pouncett -- they have all been saying things to the media and working hard to make this story as big and spectacular as possible.
The authors are probably delighted at the way things have turned out, while the editors of "Nature Scientific Reports" are probably rather embarrassed. So embarrassed, I suspect, that they may actually considering whether the paper should be retracted.
=====================
Archaeology: Some Stonehenge burials may have Welsh origin
"Nature" Scientific Reports
August 3, 2018
http://www.natureasia.com/en/research/highlight/12628
Some of the Neolithic individuals buried at Stonehenge did not originate from the local area, suggests a study in Scientific Reports. New analyses of cremated human remains indicate that some of the people buried at the site came from other parts of western Britain - most likely west Wales - and some may have been brought to the site for burial only.
Previous research has focused predominantly on Stonehenge's construction and little is known about the people who lived or were buried there, despite it being one of the largest Late Neolithic burial sites in Britain.
Christophe Snoeck and colleagues used strontium isotope analysis to reanalyse bone fragments from the cremated remains of 25 distinct individuals from the site, dating from between 3180 to 2380 BC. The authors compared these results with records from modern plants, water and dentine data from Britain. The findings suggest that 15 of the individuals were local to Stonehenge. The other ten did not have any recent connection to the region and probably spent at least the last ten years of their lives in western Britain, the authors conclude.
The study also indicates that the cremation of the remains took place under various conditions and using various types of fuel. The remains identified as local to the site suggest a funeral pyre constructed from wood grown in an open setting consistent with the Wessex landscape. The other remains indicate the pyre wood was grown in dense woodlands like those found in west Wales. The authors suggest this shows that some of the remains at the site were brought specifically to be buried there having been cremated elsewhere.
DOI:10.1038/s41598-018-28969-8 | Original article
====================
http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2018-08-02-new-light-shed-people-who-built-stonehenge
New light shed on the people who built Stonehenge
Despite over a century of intense study, we still know very little about the people buried at Stonehenge or how they came to be there. Now, a new University of Oxford research collaboration, published in Nature Scientific Reports, suggests that a number of the people that were buried at the Wessex site had moved with and likely transported the bluestones used in the early stages of the monument’s construction, sourced from the Preseli Mountains of west Wales.
Conducted in partnership with colleagues at the UCL, Université Libre de Bruxelles & Vrije Universiteit Brussel), and the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle de Paris, France, the research combined radiocarbon-dating with new developments in archaeological analysis, pioneered by lead author Christophe Snoeck during his doctoral research in the School of Archaeology at Oxford.
While there has been much speculation as to how and why Stonehenge was built, the question of ‘who’ built it has received far less attention. Part of the reason for this neglect is that many of the human remains were cremated, and so it was difficult to extract much useful information from them. Snoeck demonstrated that that cremated bone faithfully retains its strontium isotope composition, opening the way to use this technique to investigate where these people had lived during the last decade or so of their lives.
With permission from Historic England and English Heritage, the team analysed skull bones from 25 individuals to better understand the lives of those buried at the iconic monument. These remains were originally excavated from a network of 56 pits in the 1920s, placed around the inner circumference and ditch of Stonehenge, known as ‘Aubrey Holes’.
Analysis of small fragments of cremated human bone from an early phase of the site’s history around 3000 BC, when it was mainly used as a cemetery, showed that at least 10 of the 25 people did not live near Stonehenge prior to their death. Instead, they found the highest strontium isotope ratios in the remains were consistent with living in western Britain, a region that includes west Wales – the known source of Stonehenge’s bluestones. Although strontium isotope ratios alone cannot distinguish between places with similar values, this connection suggests west Wales as the most likely origin of at least some of these people.
While the Welsh connection was known for the stones, the study shows that people were also moving between west Wales and Wessex in the Late Neolithic, and that some of their remains were buried at Stonehenge. The results emphasise the importance of inter-regional connections involving the movement of both materials and people in the construction and use of Stonehenge, providing rare insight into the large scale of contacts and exchanges in the Neolithic, as early as 5000 years ago.
Lead author Christophe Snoeck said: ‘The recent discovery that some biological information survives the high temperatures reached during cremation (up to 1000 degrees Celsius) offered us the exciting possibility to finally study the origin of those buried at Stonehenge.’
John Pouncett, a lead author on the paper and Spatial Technology Officer at Oxford’s School of Archaeology, said: ‘The powerful combination of stable isotopes and spatial technology gives us a new insight into the communities who built Stonehenge. The cremated remains from the enigmatic Aubrey Holes and updated mapping of the biosphere suggest that people from the Preseli Mountains not only supplied the bluestones used to build the stone circle, but moved with the stones and were buried there too.’
Rick Schulting, a lead author on the research and Associate Professor in Scientific and Prehistoric Archaeology at Oxford, explained: ‘To me the really remarkable thing about our study is the ability of new developments in archaeological science to extract so much new information from such small and unpromising fragments of burnt bone.
Some of the people’s remains showed strontium isotope signals consistent with west Wales, the source of the bluestones that are now being seen as marking the earliest monumental phase of the site.’
Commenting on how they came to develop the innovative technique, Prof Julia Lee-Thorp, Head of Oxford’s School of Archaeology and an author on the paper, said: ‘This new development has come about as the serendipitous result of Dr Snoeck’s interest in the effects of intense heat on bones, and our realization that that heating effectively “sealed in” some isotopic signatures.’
The technique could be used to improve our understanding of the past using previously excavated ancient collections, Dr Schulting said: ‘Our results highlight the importance of revisiting old collections. The cremated remains from Stonehenge were first excavated by Colonel William Hawley in the 1920s, and while they were not put into a museum, Col Hawley did have the foresight to rebury them in a known location on the site, so that it was possible for Mike Parker Pearson (UCL Institute of Archaeology) and his team to re-excavate them, allowing various analytical methods to be applied.’
Another tier of cards is added to the tottering house. Is that Dr John at the door? The door opens! Look out for the draught! Aaaaaagh! Game of 52 card pick up anyone?
ReplyDeleteLooks to me like Maun Waun is make or break. I doubt anything will happen until after that event has been concluded and initial results shared (albeit I guess that process will be private). After that, my guess is that fast publication will be required. Will be nice to see this concluded, whichever way it goes.
ReplyDeleteMaun Waun: that's pronouced "Mine Whine" isn't it? - very suitable. What a PATHETIC bunch.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, on the usually understated andreliable BBC4 tonight, Science Britannica - Clear Blue Skies. Professor Brian Cox examines whether it is better to let scientists do their own thing and hope for accidents, or to backonly PEOPLE WITH PROVEN TRACK RECORDS (!)
Alex, as underwhelming research and excavation follows underwhelming research and excavation for the intrepid Quarry and Bluestone Circle Searchers, the Penny must be finally starting to Drop for MPP, National Geographic and associated hangers - on: the Glacial Theory has longer legs than their contender. Proper Science will triumph.
ReplyDeleteApologies again, that was me again at 21.28 on the 9th.
ReplyDeleteTony
Jon -- I wouldn't count on it that this September dig will be the last. These guys will keep going until they can convince the world that they have found the Holy Grail -- in the form of Proto-Stonehenge. Mind you, we know what they will find this year at Waun Mawn -- Proto-Stonehenge, no less, since they have already announced it before any work has started. My guess is that they will find some things that they will interpret as monolith sockets, and on this will be built the story that there was once a great stone circle here, which was shipped off to Stonehenge. There will be no control studies of other standing stone sites, because if they were to find similar things elsewhere that would spoil the story. And that would never do, would it?
ReplyDeleteThe fact that they excavated and destroyed the sequence of Quaternary sediments at Rhosyfelin without properly recording it is bad enough! One wonders how many more scientifically important Quaternary deposits MPP and his students will be allowed to destroy without proper recording or analysis, before the NERC EH or other grant funding bodies intervene?
ReplyDeleteMPP....... STILL......., to my knowledge and I would think to everyone else's, has not demonstrated, by showing the Media and the rest of us that his so - called Bluestonehenge had monolith sockets WITH SIMILAR SHAPES ETC to the bluestones of the Old Ruin up above it, that he was entitled to name it Bluestone - henge.. That, in itself, is a surprise, since he was/is so adamant that he'd found bluestone sockets [despite having found not even the smallest fragment of a bluestone whilst on that particular dig near the bottom of The Avenue near the river Avon.
ReplyDeleteSince then, virtually every other archaeologist outside the closed world of the Stonehenge Riverside Project team, calls it, instead, The West Amesbury Henge.
What a WIDE smile has Christophe.......That's all I'm saying.................
ReplyDeleteThanks Brian. The Nature press release does however contains the remarkable line: "The other remains indicate the pyre wood was grown in dense woodlands like those found in west Wales." ...well yes and pretty much everywhere else at the time. Really. Not very Scientific for Scientific Reports
ReplyDeleteHere's our rather belated item (a sever transfer deadline and ebook checking had to come first!)
http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=2146414340
A certain well - known and respected archaeologist whom out of respect I am not going to name, also described the continuing September Preseli MPP - organised digs as their "search for the Holy Grail", when talking to me around a year ago, back in Wessex. Perhaps that is the nearest he was prepared to go to expressing any sense of scepticism. He has been taking part in these Preseli digs himself and I am sure his involvement is appreciated because of his experience and knowledge.
ReplyDelete