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....
To order, click
HERE

Monday, 11 March 2013

More on Neolithic boats


This looks like an interesting book -- relevant to some of our earlier discussions about Doggerland and about Neolithic seafaring.  I have glanced at a few pages (on the Amazon web site!) and I get the impression that around 5,000 years ago (when lots of bluestones were supposedly being moved about by our heroic ancestors) there was no real capacity for heavy-duty long-distance stone transport by sea.

It appears that the early voyagers used very simple log boats rather like those found at Carpow and Must Farm.  Some had rounded bows and sterns but more seem to have had transoms or "end-plates" slotted into a groove at the stern end, making steering easier and making it easier to protect boats from theft. (The idea is then when you leave your boat on the shore for hours, days or weeks, you take the transom with you, making it impossible for anybody to use the boat in your absence......)


The Bronze Age Carpow Boat following its recovery from the mud and silt of the Tay Estuary.  Part of it is missing, but the overall shape is apparent.


One of the six Bronze Age boats recovered at Must Farm, Cambridgeshire.  One can see the hollowed out cross profile.


The transom in position at the stern of the Bronze Age Carpow Boat.

Although boats like these were sometimes over 9m long, and could accommodate maybe eight paddlers, they must have been seriously unstable in rough water or out in the open sea -- and were clearly best suited for use on lakes or within sheltered estuaries.  Robert van der Noort speculates on whether they were utilitarian items, used for fishing and rough duties along the coast -- or whether they were high-status items.  Probably they did have a lot of status attached to them, since they must have required many hundreds of hours of hard work to make them in the first place -- even in the Bronze Age, with metal tools available.  In the Neolithic, with only stone tools available, the status or value of such a boat must have been even higher.  On that basis the author of the book suggests that they were used primarily for carrying high-value trade goods -- necklaces, maces, ornamental axes, amber and other precious stones, and maybe high-value pottery or fabrics or skins.

Even with outriggers in place, and with the use of sail, I cannot see that boats such as these can have carried 4-tonne bluestones across the Bristol Channel in pre-Bronze age times.  This leaves us with rafts and skin boats or curraghs as the only contenders -- and there is likewise no evidence at all that the required technology was available to Neolithic seafarers at the time we are talking about.

The only slight consolation for those who want to believe in the sea transport of the bluestones is that domestic animals must have been transported between Great Britain and the continent, and between Britain and Ireland.  How would a sheep, or a cow, or a goat, be carried in a dugout canoe?  Animals are notoriously difficult to move about in boats.  Maybe they were trussed up and forced to lie on the floor of the dugout for the duration of the voyage?  Seriously uncomfortable, for both the paddlers and the animals concerned........  But to transport a bluestone is to move up another notch on the difficulty scale.

By the way, there is more on the dugout canoes here:

http://www.pkht.org.uk/carpow-logboat.php

http://www.mcdonald.cam.ac.uk/news/120120/Current_Archaeology_Must_Farm_Feb_2012.pdf


A thing of beauty


I'm posting this for no other reason than that I think it's a fantastic image....... the flank of a large iceberg, probably off the west coast of Greenland.  It's very rare to find the water THIS calm, and the reflections this perfect, and the ice quite as clean as this.... 

Click to enlarge.

Sunday, 10 March 2013

How smart were our Neolithic ancestors?

Now this is interesting -- I haven't read the book, but my impression from reading the article is that the author might well be challenging some of the fondly-held assumptions about the brilliance and expertise of our Neolithic ancestors.  As readers of this blog will know, I have often argued that it is a profound mistake to assume that 5,000 years ago the tribal groups who lived their rather short if not brutish lives in the British Isles were "modern people in fancy dress."   I have often questioned their ability to undertake complex mathematical or geometrical calculations, to make accurate astronomical observations, to record and classify large bodies of information, to navigate accurately by the stars, and to undertake gigantic engineering or logistical tasks including the long-distance and coordinated transport of scores of very large stones across great distances of land or sea.  I have also questioned the assumption that there was a sort of "ancient wisdom" which has been lost -- and which is often cited in arguments against those who are cautious about the technical abilities of communities who lived 5,000 years ago.

Forgive me if I am wrong, but what this book seems to be saying is that there has been a great deal of evolution -- physical and mental -- since the Stone Age, and that we are in grave danger of going up the creek if we think that we know either the minds or life styles of those who lived at the time Stonehenge was being built.  (This of course is the sort of thing which MPP greatly enjoys doing, often on the basis of remarkably little hard evidence.  It appears to be a malaise which afflicts a lot of archaeologists across the world.....)

I like this too:  ".........to draw conclusions about ancestral hunter-gatherers by examining diverse forager communities existing now, as some anthropologists do (we might add "archaeologists" as well), is dubious in itself."  Madagascar comes to mind, as do the stones of the ancestors.......


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Sunday, Mar 10, 2013

“Paleofantasy”: Stone Age delusions

http://www.salon.com/2013/03/10/paleofantasy_stone_age_delusions/
An evolutionary biologist explains why everything you think you know about cavemen (and their diet) is wrong

By Laura Miller



Four years ago, biology professor Marlene Zuk was attending a conference on evolution and diseases of modern environments. She sat in on a presentation by Loren Cordain, author of “The Paleo Diet” and a leading guru of the current craze for emulating the lifestyles of our Stone-Age ancestors. Cordain pronounced several foods (bread, rice, potatoes) to be the cause of a fatal condition in people carrying certain genes. Intrigued, Zuk stood up and asked Cordain why this genetic inability to digest so many common foods had persisted. “Surely it would have been selected out of the population,” she suggested.

Cordain, who has a Ph.D in exercise physiology, assured Zuk that human beings had not had time to adapt to foods that only became staples with the advent of agriculture. “It’s only been ten thousand years,” he explained. Zuk’s response: “Plenty of time.” He looked at her blankly, and she repeated: “Plenty of time.” Zuk goes on to write, “we never resolved our disagreement.”

That’s not, strictly speaking, true. Consider “Paleofantasy: What Evolution Really Tells Us About Sex, Diet and How We Live,” a conclusive refutation of Cordain’s quixotic, if widespread, view of human evolution, along with many other misconceptions. Zuk — who has a puckish humor (she describes one puffy-lipped Nicaraguan fish as “the Angelina Jolie of cichlids”) and a history of studying evolution, ecology and behavior — found herself bemused by how the object of her research has been portrayed in various media and subcultures. She cruised the New York Times’ health blog and sites like cavemanforum.com, collecting half-baked interpretations of evolutionary “facts” and eccentric theories ranging from the repudiation of eyeglasses to the belief that carbs can make one’s nose “more round.”

Although she writes, “I would not dream of denying the evolutionary heritage present in our bodies,” Zuk briskly dismisses as simply “wrong” many common notions about that heritage. These errors fall into two large categories: misunderstandings about how evolution works and unfounded assumptions about how paleolithic humans lived. The first area is her speciality, and “Paleofantasy” offers a lively, lucid illustration of the intricacies of this all-important natural process. When it comes to the latter category, the anthropological aspect of the problem, Zuk treads more gingerly. Not only is this not her own field, but, as she observes, it is “ground often marked by acrimony and rancor” among the specialists themselves.

It is striking how fixated on the alleged behavior of our hunting-and-foraging forbearers some educated inhabitants of the developed world have become. Among the most obsessed are those who insist, as Zuk summarizes, that “our bodies and minds evolved under a particular set of circumstances, and in changing those circumstances without allowing our bodies time to evolve in response, we have wreaked the havoc that is modern life.” Not only would we be happier and healthier if we lived like “cavemen,” this philosophy dictates, but “we are good at things we had to do back in the Pleistocene … and bad at things we didn’t.”

The most persuasive argument Zuk marshals against such views has to do with the potential for relatively rapid evolution, major changes that can appear over a time as short as, or even shorter than, the 10,000 years Cordain scoffed at. There are plenty of examples of this in humans and other species. In one astonishing case, a type of cricket Zuk studied, when transplanted from its original habitat to Hawaii, became almost entirely silent in the course of a mere five years. (A parasitical fly used the insects’ sounds to locate hosts.) This was all the more remarkable because audible leg-rubbing was the crickets’ main way of attracting mates, literally the raison d’etre of male crickets. The Hawaiian crickets constitute “one of the fastest cases of evolution in the wild, taking not hundreds or thousands of generations, but a mere handful,” Zuk writes. Adjusted to human years, that amounts to “only a few centuries.”

There are human examples, as well, such as “lactase persistence” (the ability in adults to digest the sugar in cow’s milk), a trait possessed by about 35 percent of the world’s population — and growing, since the gene determining it is dominant. Geneticists estimate that this ability emerged anywhere from 2200 to 20,000 years ago, but since the habit of drinking cow’s milk presumably arose after cattle were domesticated around 7000 years ago, the more recent dates are the most likely. In a similar, if nondietary, example, “Blue eyes were virtually unknown as little as 6000 to 10,000 years ago,” while now they are quite common. A lot can change in 10,000 years.

Zuk detects an unspoken, barely formed assumption that humanity essentially stopped evolving in the Stone Age and that our bodies are “stuck” in a state that was perfectly adapted to survive in the paleolithic environment. Sometimes you hear that the intervention of “culture” has halted the process of natural selection. This, “Paleofantasy” points out, flies in the face of facts. Living things are always and continuously in the process of adapting to the changing conditions of their environment, and the emergence of lactase persistence indicates that culture (in this case, the practice of keeping livestock for meat and hides) simply becomes another one of those conditions.

For this reason, generalizations about the typical hunter-gatherer lifestyle are spurious; it doesn’t exist. With respect to what people ate (especially how much meat), the only safe assumption was “whatever they could get,” something that to this day varies greatly depending on where they live. Recently, researchers discovered evidence that people in Europe were grinding and cooking grain (a paleo-diet bugaboo) as far back as 30,000 years ago, even if they weren’t actually cultivating it. “A strong body of evidence,” Zuk writes, “points to many changes in our genome since humans spread across the planet and developed agriculture, making it difficult at best to point to a single way of eating to which we were, and remain, best suited.”

Social and family relationships, too, vary greatly. But to draw conclusions about ancestral hunter-gatherers by examining diverse forager communities existing now, as some anthropologists do, is dubious in itself. Tribal people, too, have had tens of thousands of years to evolve. And unlike paleolithic hunter-gatherers, they live on the margins of developed societies and are almost always affected by them in some way.

Furthermore, the fossil record of the Stone Age is so small and necessarily incomplete that its ability to tell us about paleolithic society is severely limited. Consider this: For all we know, the first tools were not stone implements but woven slings designed to allow a mother to carry an infant while foraging; it’s just that stone happens to survive longer than fibers.

Why are we so intent on establishing how paleolithic people ate, exercised, coupled up and raised their kids? That’s a question Zuk considers only in passing, but she hits the nail pretty solidly on the head: “We have a regrettable tendency to see what we want to see and rationalize what we already want to do. That often means that if we can think of a way in which a behavior, whether it is eating junk food or having an affair, might have been beneficial in an ancestral environment, we feel vindicated, or at least justified.” Even if we wanted to live like  cavemen, Zuk points out (noting that the desire to do so somehow never seems to extend to moving into mud huts), we couldn’t. In reality, we don’t have their bodies, and don’t live in their world. Even the animals and plants we eat have changed beyond recognition from their paleolithic ancestors. It turns out we’re stuck being us.

Saturday, 9 March 2013

The latest from MPP - Stonehenge was a mega-cemetery








Coming tomorrow-- the latest TV spectacular from MPP and his busy band of helpers. This time the programme (scheduled for Channel Four) will apparently deal with all those bones found in the Aubrey Holes -- many of which have now been dated.   What interests me is that the heroic story of the long-distance bluestone haulage is still there -- MPP can clearly not admit to any doubt on that score -- but that the date for the arrival and use of the stones at Stonehenge is being pushed back all the time.  Now MPP is talking about the stones being on the site 5,000 years ago -- something I have pointed out many times on this blog.  That far back in the Neolithic we have to question the technical ability of the Stonehenge builders to conduct a civil engineering / haulage project on the vast scale envisaged by MPP -- and we have to give a gentle reminder that the stones were probably used because they were already there or thereabouts, having been dumped by ice many thousands (or hundreds of thousands) of years before........


Anyway, we look forward to seeing the programme.


Stonehenge may have been burial site for Stone Age elite, say archaeologists

from Stonehenge News blog (Guardian news story by Maev Kennedy)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2013/mar/09/archaeology-stonehenge-bones-burial-ground

Dating cremated bone fragments of men, women and children found at site puts origin of first circle back 500 years to 3,000BC

Centuries before the first massive sarsen stone was hauled into place at Stonehenge, the world's most famous prehistoric monument may have begun life as a giant burial ground, according to a theory disclosed on Saturday.

More than 50,000 cremated bone fragments, of 63 individuals buried at Stonehenge, have been excavated and studied for the first time by a team led by archaeologist Professor Mike Parker Pearson, who has been working at the site and on nearby monuments for decades. He now believes the earliest burials long predate the monument in its current form.

The first bluestones, the smaller standing stones, were brought from Wales and placed as grave markers around 3,000BC, and it remained a giant circular graveyard for at least 200 years, with sporadic burials after that, he claims.

It had been thought that almost all the Stonehenge burials, many originally excavated almost a century ago, but discarded as unimportant, were of adult men. However, new techniques have revealed for the first time that they include almost equal numbers of men and women, and children including a newborn baby.

"At the moment the answer is no to extracting DNA, which might tell us more about these individuals and what the relationship was between them – but who knows in the future? Clearly these were special people in some way," Parker Pearson said.

A mace head, a high-status object comparable to a sceptre, and a little bowl burnt on one side, which he believes may have held incense, suggest the dead could have been religious and political leaders and their immediate families.

The team included scientists from the universities of Southampton, Manchester, Bournemouth, Sheffield, London, York and Durham. Their work is revealed for the first time in a documentary on Channel 4 on Sunday night, Secrets of the Stonehenge Skeletons.

Archaeologists have argued for centuries about what Stonehenge really meant to the people who gave hundreds of thousands of hours to constructing circles of bluestones shipped from Wales, and sarsens the size of double-decker buses dragged across Salisbury plain. Druids and New Age followers still claim the site as their sacred place. Others have judged it a temple, an observatory, a solar calendar, a site for fairs or ritual feasting or – one of the most recent theories – a centre for healing, a sort of Stone Age Lourdes.

The latest theory is based on the first analysis of more than 50,000 fragments of cremated human remains from one of the Aubrey holes, a ring of pits from the earliest phase of the monument, which some have believed held wooden posts. Crushed chalk in the bottom of the pit was also revealed, suggesting it once supported the weight of one of the bluestones. Dating the bones has pushed back the date of earliest stone circle at the site from 2500BC to 3000BC.

Parker Pearson believes his earlier excavation at nearby Durrington Walls, which uncovered hut sites, tools, pots and mountains of animal bones – the largest Stone Age site in north-west Europe – is evidence of a seasonal work camp for the Stonehenge builders, who quarried, dragged and shaped more than 2,000 tons of stone to build the monument. Analysis of the animal bones shows some of them travelled huge distances – from as far as Scotland – and were slaughtered at Durrington in mid-summer and mid-winter: "Not so much bring a bottle as bring a cow or a pig," Parker Pearson said.

Mike Pitts, an archaeologist, blogger and editor of the British Archaeology journal, who has excavated some of the cremated human remains from Stonehenge, says the new theory proves the need for more research and excavation at the site.

"I have now come to believe that there are hundreds, maybe many times that, of burials at Stonehenge, and that some predate the earliest phase of the monument," Pitts said. "The whole history of the monument is inseparably linked to death and burial – but I believe that there are hundreds more burials to be found across the site, which will tell us more of the story."

Almost all the prehistoric human remains come from the eastern side of the circle, and many had been excavated by earlier archaeologists including William Hawley in the 1920s, who regarding them as unimportant compared with the giant stones, reburied them jumbled together using one of the Aubrey holes as a convenient pit.

"There must be more, in the western quadrant, or buried outside the enclosure ditch. A new excavation could clinch it," Pitts said.

This autumn visitors to Stonehenge will see more interpretation of its complex history than ever before, when English Heritage finally opens its long-awaited visitor centre – originally planned to usher in the new millennium in 2000.

Saturday, 2 March 2013

Streaming ice...


If you ever wondered about the fact that glacier ice (which is rather solid) is actually a flowing medium, take a look at this photo.  It's a new image from the Google Earth imagery of a big outlet glacier in South Greenland.  Click to enlarge -- you can almost hear it streaming eastwards, towards the coast.....

Thursday, 28 February 2013

The Gernos-fawr moraine


Well now -- this is as fine a moraine as I have seen in a long time.  Its at Gernos-fawr, near the headwaters of the Gwaun River, at an altitude of 240m.  A very distinct mound in the middle of the valley, littered with boulders of all shapes and sizes, but mostly faceted and sub-rounded -- as one would expect with a deposit made largely of glacially-transported material.

Why haven't I spotted it before? The reason is that this hillock has been previously covered with gorse bushes -- and it is quite recently that the farmer / smallholder here has had the pigs in to clear it, followed by sheep, geese and chickens.  So all is now revealed......

 The Gernos-fawr moraine is at the black spot, bottom right of the image. Click to enlarge

What is the significance of this find?  Really, I haven't got a clue.  According to all my predispositions, there shouldn't be a moraine here at all, since it is on the south side of the Gwaun Channel, about 2 km distant from the hump or highest point on the valley floor.  I assume that it is Devensian in age -- so could it have been built at a glacier terminus following ice movement across the Carningli massif and across the Gwaun Channel?  That's possible, since I have speculated many times before on Carningli being completely covered by ice at the Devensian maximum.  Here is one of my earlier maps, with Gernos-fawr marked on it:


 As we can see, Gernos-fawr is very close to this suggested ice limit, given than an ice edge never is straight -- but tends to mould itself to the contours, fingering up valleys and leaving ridges ice-free.
So far so good.  Now for something I have just discovered,  having looked rather carefully at the satellite image above (the second image on this post.)  Click to enlarge, and then have a look at the area of big fields NNE of Gelli-fawr and the area to the SW of Gernos-fawr.  Do you see the slight traces of elongated curving ridges?  I have a feeling that these might be slight traces of morainic ridges, related to a lowering (retreating) ice edge.  This is rather exciting -- I must go and check them out in the field, while bearing in mind that they might be structural benches.

You saw it here first, folks.  I'm on the case.  Watch this space.....










Wednesday, 27 February 2013

New OSL dates for North Somerset sediments



Six new dates have been obtained from sediments in the Gordano Valley, North Somerset, as part of a research project by Anne Bridle from West of England University in Bristol.

This area is well known for the presence of glacial and related deposits, proving that the ice of the Irish Sea Glacier extended into North Somerset on at least one occasion and possibly more.

In a brief note ("Optical Ages of a Pleistocene sequence in the Gordano Valley, North Somerset, UK"  Quaternary Newsletter Vol 129, Feb 2013, p 72) the researcher says that samples were taken from a sequence of sands, gravels and "clay drift" beneath the recent peat layer.  The "clay drift" may be till, but the author doesn't comment on this.  The dated samples all come from the sands and gravels, and they range somewhat erratically between 91,000 and 62,000 BP -- which places all of them into the Early Devensian and possibly the preceding interglacial.  It's a pity that the OSL technique is the only one used here, since all of the new methods of dating non-organic materials really need checks from other techniques so that systematic errors can be eliminated.  So we don't know as yet whether these dates can be taken at face value.

But if, for the moment, we accept that they are reliable, this means that the till (?) at the base of the sequence cannot be Devensian, and must therefore be Anglian -- as we have suggested on this blog many times before.

So although there may well have been small ice caps on Dartmoor, Exmoor, Mendip and other upland areas of the South-West, it does not look, according to current evidence, as if the Devensian Irish Sea Ice Sheet transgressed across the Somerset coast........