
As construction for a tunnel under Stonehenge begins, archaeological surprises are turning up.
Do you ever wonder about the layers of civilization buried deep beneath your feet? John Hanson Mitchell wondered about my region’s layers back in a 1980s book, here. He got himself into a kind of trancelike state in which he believed he could sense the presence of indigenous tribes living their lives beside what is now Interstate 495.
More recently, as Steven Morris reports at the Guardian, “Bronze age graves, neolithic pottery and the vestiges of a mysterious C-shaped enclosure that might have been a prehistoric industrial area are [being] unearthed by archaeologists who have carried out preliminary work on the site of the proposed new road tunnel at Stonehenge.
“One of the most intriguing discoveries is a unique shale object that could have been part of a staff or club found in a 4,000-year-old grave. Nearby is the resting spot of a baby buried with a small, plain beaker. Ditches that flank the C-shaped enclosure contain burnt flint, suggesting a process such as metal or leatherworking was carried out there thousands of years ago.
“Just south of the site of the Stonehenge visitor centre, archaeologists came upon neolithic grooved ware pottery possibly left there by the people who built the stone circle or visited it.
“ ‘We’ve found a lot – evidence about the people who lived in this landscape over millennia, traces of people’s everyday lives and deaths, intimate things,’ said Matt Leivers, A303 Stonehenge consultant archaeologist at Wessex Archaeology. …
“The plan to drop the A303, which passes close to the stones, into a two-mile tunnel is hugely controversial, with many experts having said that carrying out such intrusive construction work would cause disastrous harm to one of the world’s most precious ancient landscapes and lead to the loss of hundreds of thousands of artefacts. A legal challenge was launched against the £1.7bn plan late last year.
“Highways England and Wessex Archaeology, which is leading the exploration of the tunnel corridor, said they were working on the project systematically and sensitively. …
“Close to the western end, two burials of Beaker people, who arrived in Britain in about 2,500BC, were found. One was an adult, buried in a crouched position with a pot or beaker. Also in the grave was a copper awl or fragment of a pin or needle and a small shale cylindrical object, of a type that is not believed to have been found before.
“ ‘It is an oddity,’ said Leivers. More detailed work will be carried out to find out what it is, but one theory is that it could be the tip of a ceremonial wooden staff or mace. Also found in the same area was a pit dating to the age of the Beaker people containing the tiny ear bones of a child and a very simple pot – a sign that this too was a grave. Usually Beaker pots are ornate but this one is plain, probably to reflect the age of the person who died.
“A little farther south, the C-shaped enclosure was found. ‘It is a strange pattern of ditches,’ said Leivers. ‘It’s difficult to say what it was, but we know how old it is because we found a near-complete bronze age pot in one of the ditches.’ …
“Another find was a group of objects dating to the late neolithic period – when the stone circle was built – including grooved ware pottery, a flint and red deer antlers. …
“Highways England said the amount of survey work that had been carried out was unprecedented because of the significance of the site. David Bullock, A303 project manager for Highways England, said: ‘There has been a huge amount of investigations so that this route can be threaded through so as to disturb as little as possible.’ ”
What mysteries will your everyday items pose for archaeologists of the future? What will more advanced people with no need for mouth guards or braces, say, make of gizmos like that?
More at the Guardian, here.
When I lose a nail or screw or something in the yard, I figure it’s a future find for some archeolist in the future. I can just hear them, “Look what I found!”
Now if only the person finding the high school ring I lost in my front yard would try to get in touch with a granddaughter or great-granddaughter of mine …
Stonehenge is on my list of places to visit eventually 🙂
I hope it will still feel magical when you get here.
Hey, my college ring fell behind the industrial sink at which I was washing dishes. Have always wondered if they found it when they converted the residence.
I must say though, that I think the idea of running a road under Stonehenge is ridiculous. For the amount they’ve spent on trying to figure out how to do it, they could probably have routed around it. Is there nothing sacred?
I know. I don’t get it. PS. I don’t think many people actually manage to save their school rings anymore. We do seem to have one that J’s mother got at her Phila high school in the 1920s, though.
So many layers of history buried beneath Stonehenge. Through artifacts we get a glimpse of what life was like for people who lived long, long ago. There is a recent movie called “The Dig” that explores this. Plan on watching it soon.
Will look for that. Thanks for another good tip.
I’m hoping my little treasures I make will stay above ground… but maybe a few spoons will show up for the children like to dig with them.
You are right. Future children will love to dig with spoons, just as today’s children do.