The pretence that the bluestones at Stonehenge are all pillars has been promoted vigorously for many years, by many people who should know better. As I have pointed out many times before, the great majority of the 43 bluestones are not pillars but slabs and boulders which look for all the world like an erratic assortment collected from near the front of a wasting glacier. They are weathered and heavily abraded, with very few sharp edges -- suggesting that wherever they have come from, they have been collected or gathered up, and not quarried. The members of the MPP "quarrying" team seem to be in complete denial about this, and never mention it in their papers......
https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2016/08/the-stonehenge-boulders.html
There has now been much work on the origins of the stones, but not much work at all on the amount of time that has elapsed since their weathered surfaces were first exposed to cosmogenic radiation. all we can say at present is that most of the boulders and slabs have weathering crusts on them, suggesting that they have been exposed to the atmosphere for tens of thousands of years. Surface sampling would be easy to do, and would sort out the dilemma, if only EH would allow it. As it is, that august organization treats every stone as if it is a religious relic, too precious to touch, and it seems to be far more interested in mysteries and narratives than in hard science.
Cosmogenic dating methods have come on by leaps and bounds, and we are now in the "mature investigative phase" with thousands of cosmogenic dates in the bag and hundreds of studies which have gradually ironed out the inconsistencies which were at first puzzling. This happens with all "new" scientific methods -- pollen analyses, C14 dating, amino acid dating, X-ray studies of rock surfaces and so forth. (To a large degree this explains the recent spat between me and David Nash over the "discovery" of the source of the Stonehenge sarsens. He believes implicitly in the accuracy of his new techniques, and his interpretations, whereas I employ a degree of scepticism on the grounds that the methods are immature, and are bound to be improved as experience accumulates......)
Below I cite two quite important studies of erratic boulders on or near moraines, which have led to the same conclusion: namely that boulders carried in glaciers tend to be modified sufficiently (even if they have not been carried very far) for any "inherited age" characteristics to be eliminated. This means that the dating of surface almost always underestimates the real exposure age, with incomplete exposure due to post depositional shielding by (for example) vegetation, snow cover, or blown sand.
So let's get those bluestone boulders at Stonehenge sampled and measured. I am quite certain that the ages will come out at far in excess of 5,000 BP -- which is what they should be if they were quarried by our Neolithic ancestors. I would estimate that the exposure ages on the boulders will be around 20,000 - 15,000 yrs BP, with some irregularities down to intermittent surface shielding.
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TWO INTERESTING PAPERS
Dating of raised marine and lacustrine deposits in east Greenland using beryllium-10 depth profiles and implications for estimates of subglacial erosion
BRENT M. GOEHRING, MEREDITH A. KELLY, JOERG M. SCHAEFER, ROBERT C. FINKEL and THOMAS V. LOWELL
JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE (2010)
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.1380
ABSTRACT:
From Sugden and John, 1965. We dated the big Holger Danskes Briller moraine to 10,500 yrs BP -- which was not bad, given the limited resources and dating methods at our disposal. We were, as it happens, about 500 years adrift with the dating....... and the moraine is now deemed to be a classic indicator of the "Inner Milne Land Stage" in East Greenland. But our levelling of the marine stillstand to 101m was pretty well spot on. We measured the marine limit in this region at 134m.
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Too young or too old: Evaluating cosmogenic exposure dating based on an analysis of compiled boulder exposure ages
Jakob Heyman, Arjen P. Stroeven, Jonathan M. Harbor,Marc W. Caffee
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume 302, Issues 1–2, 1 February 2011, Pages 71-80
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0012821X10007478?via%3Dihub
ABSTRACT
Cosmogenic exposure dating has greatly enhanced our ability to define glacial chronologies spanning several global cold periods, and glacial boulder exposure ages are now routinely used to constrain deglaciation ages. However, exposure dating involves assumptions about the geological history of the sample that are difficult to test and yet may have a profound effect on the inferred age. Two principal geological factors yield erroneous inferred ages: exposure prior to glaciation (yielding exposure ages that are too old) and incomplete exposure due to post depositional shielding (yielding exposure ages that are too young).Here we show that incomplete exposure is more important than prior exposure, using data sets of glacial boulder Be exposure ages from the Tibetan Plateau (1420 boulders), Northern Hemisphere palaeo-ice sheets (631 boulders), and present-day glaciers (208 boulders). No boulders from present-day glaciers and few boulders from the palaeo-ice sheets have exposure ages significantly older than independently known deglaciation ages, indicating that prior exposure is of limited significance. Further, while a simple post-depositional landform degradation model can predict the exposure age distribution of boulders from the Tibetan Plateau, a prior exposure model fails,indicating that incomplete exposure is important. The large global dataset demonstrates that, in the absence of other evidence, glacial boulder exposure ages should be viewed as minimum limiting deglaciation ages.
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