Pages

Wednesday, 24 April 2024

Bluestone lithics from the Stonehenge landscape



Lots of sockets and lots of stones -- from the Darvill / Wainwright 2008  dig at Stonehenge.  The packing stones on the left are probably all sarsens, but there is a lot else going on here.

Thanks to Tony for a number of comments recently about the bluestone lithics in the Stonehenge landscape.  There are -- by common consent -- thousands of them, dug up and revealed in Stonehenge digs, in field walking exercises, and in excavations elsewhere in the Stonehenge landscape.  Most of them are ignored or thrown away, and Ixer and Bevins choose not to take them seriously unless they are clearly related to known bluestone orthostats -- so that neatly eliminates anything "inconvenient"............

See Julian Richards, 1990 -- The Stonehenge Environs Project, EH, London

https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archiveDS/archiveDownload?t=arch-1416-1/dissemination/pdf/9781848022096_ALL_72.pdf

But it isn't that easy. Stone and Richards, in various publications, refer to a "wide distribution" of fragments of dolerite, rhyolite and volcanic ash, and they refer to many rock types that are not represented in the bluestone orthostat assemblage.  They refer to "unknown" rhyolites, ashes, dolerites and quartzites.  Mostly they label the bluestone finds as flakes, fragments, slabs, hammerstones or tools -- demonstrating an unwillingness to contemplate the presence of bluestone boulders, cobbles or pebbles that might have nothing to do with human activity.

And the things that are all too easily referred to as "tools" may indeed not be tools at all, but perfectly natural small bluestone erratics such as we might find in any degraded glacial deposit:

Here is another old photo from a 1902 excavation at Stonehenge, again assumed to show "sarsen stone and flint implements" -- with no apparent awareness that some might simply be glacial erratics......

https://www.silentearth.org/restorations-at-stonehenge-2/


In the photographic record of the Atkinson and earlier digs at Stonehenge, over and again we see packing stones and small boulders that are simply ignored and thrown onto spoil heaps.  Appalling!  Watch this space.........


Atkinson helping to remove a packing stone
See also:

P 15.  In the centre we found a shaft. Atkinson must have skimmed the edge of it in 1964, but most of it lies within our trench. It is about 1.1m deep and has a very homogenous fill. Right in the top there was a very fine block of bluestone, which Rob Ixer has provisionally identified as a piece of very fine-grained siltstone or sandstone; geologically speaking, this can be paralleled by a piece found in the cursus by J F S Stone some years ago. So we have an interesting circulation of bluestone fragments; this is a substantial piece and all around it is a scattering of flakes and smaller pieces, which have been broken off.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/11797/1/Darvill_and_Wainwright_2009_Stonehenge_Excavations_2008.pdf

The Antiquaries Journal, 89, 2009, pp 1–19  The Society of Antiquaries of London, 2009 doi:10.1017⁄s000358150900002x. 
First published online 21 April 2009

STONEHENGE EXCAVATIONS 2008 Timothy Darvill, VPSA, and Geoffrey Wainwright, PSA













3 comments:

  1. Tony Hinchliffe24 April 2024 at 23:36

    One of the things that astonishes me, apart from the tendency of the archaeologists, en masse, to ignore "the elephant in the wider Stonehenge landscape", is for notable " celebrity archaeologists" such as Phil Harding, Honorary PhD, University of Southampton, to refuse to apply his own brainpower to this whole glaciation hypothesis question. It saddens me. He seems to be another one associated with both the Stonehenge wider landscape/ Salisbury P!ain [ e.g. the recent initial excavation at Boles Barrow] and also as a former employee for many years of the Wessex Archaeology company, to not be brave enough to stand up, use his skills and intelligence, and consider seriously the merits for accepting the case for glaciation based upon what his eyes in the excavation trenches tell him (and others at, e.g. Wessex Archaeology).Is the Human Transport notion so untouchable?? If so, for goodness sake WHY??

    ReplyDelete
  2. Tony Hinchliffe25 April 2024 at 10:48

    Thankfully, there will be a new generation of environmental archaeologists and earth scientists and others growing up as I type, who are NOT wedded to this ruling hypothesis straight jacket and will go forth and demonstrate through application that the glaciation hypothesis holds all the aces.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Tony Hinchliffe27 April 2024 at 18:30

    On the subject of modern - day archaeologists who are actively involved with Salisbury Plain, I have just noticed that Richard Osgood, the M.O.D. archaeologist, was awarded an M.B.E. in 2021. I'd encourage him to address this issue of the glaciation evidence waiting to be found on Salisbury Plain. Some of you may remember he recently led an Operation Nightingale team of army veterans in the re - excavation of the notable Boles Barrow on the Plain and physically in Heytesbury Parish (where William Cunnington is buried in its graveyard). You never know, Richard, a knighthood may await you!

    ReplyDelete

Please leave your message here