
CEMETERY CIRCLENew radiocarbon measurements of burned human bones excavated earlier indicate that the famous Stonehenge site in southern England served as a cemetery for half a millennium, from around 5,000 to 4,500 years ago.
Adam Stanford/copyright 2008 National Geographic
Stonehenge, a set of earth, timber,
and stone structures perched provocatively on England’s Salisbury Plain, has long
invited lively speculation about its origin and purpose.
There was nothing
lively about Stonehenge in its heyday, though.
Ancient big-wigs used Stonehenge as a cemetery from its inception nearly 5,000
years ago until well after its large stones were put in place 500 years later, according
to the directors of a 2007 investigation of the ancient site.
The new findings challenge a
longstanding assumption that the deceased were buried at Stonehenge
for only a 100-year window, from 4,700 to 4,600 years ago, and before the large
stones—known as sarsens—were hauled in and assembled into a circle. But the new
findings indicate that Stonehenge was a
cemetery for at least 500 years, beginning around 5,000 years ago.
“Stonehenge was the biggest
graveyard of the third millennium B.C.,” says archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson
of the University of Sheffield in England. “From its beginning, it
was used as a cemetery for a large number of people.” Parker Pearson directs
the Stonehenge Riverside Archaeological Project, which began in 2003 and runs
through 2010.
Parker Pearson and archaeologist
Julian Thomas of the University of Manchester in England
described their latest findings May 29 at a teleconference held by one of their
funding organizations, the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C.
He and his colleagues obtained the
first radiocarbon age estimates for cremated human remains excavated earlier at
Stonehenge. These burned bones were unearthed
more than 50 years ago and have been kept at a nearby museum.
The earliest cremation, a small pile
of burned bones and teeth, dates from 5,030 to 4,880 years ago, about the time
when a circular ditch and a series of pits were cut into the Salisbury Plain. The
human remains originally lay in one of those pits, at the edge of where the
circle of sarsen stones would later be placed.
An adult’s burned bones, originally found
in a ditch that encircles Stonehenge, date
from 4,930 to 4,870 years ago.
Remnants of a third cremation date
from 4,570 to 4,340 years ago, around the time when sarsen stones first
appeared at Stonehenge.
Another 49 cremation burials were
unearthed at Stonehenge during the 1920s but
later interred again because archaeologists at that time saw no scientific value in
the bones. An estimated 150 to 240 cremated bodies were buried at Stonehenge over a span of 500 to 600 years.
Andrew Chamberlain, a biological
anthropologist at the University of Sheffield who did not participate in last year’s dig,
suspects that Stonehenge functioned as a cemetery
for 30 to 40 generations of a single family, perhaps a ruling dynasty. In
support of that hypothesis, the head of a stone mace had been buried with one
set of cremated remains, Parker Pearson says. Maces symbolized authority in
British prehistory.
If Stonehenge operated as a domain
of the dead, the nearby village
of Durrington Walls was
built around the same time to accommodate the living, Parker Pearson asserts.
In 2006, his team discovered remnants of this village, grouped around a timber
version of Stonehenge. Stonehenge’s
builders apparently lived at the site for part of each year beginning around
4,600 years ago.
Last year the researchers excavated
four houses at Durrington Walls that once sat on a hillside. An especially
well-preserved structure yielded a wall made of cobb, a mixture of broken chalk
and chunky plaster. It’s the oldest such wall known in England, Parker
Pearson says. The other houses consisted mostly of a more primitive,
wattle-and-daub material.
The well-preserved house contained a
few relics of everyday life, including flint tools and sharp flint chips swept
into two teacup-sized holes in the corners. Imprints of a bed and dresser were
visible on the floor, as well as two thick grooves where someone once knelt near
an oval-shaped hearth.
The researchers also uncovered
remains of several three-sided structures along a broad avenue that linked
Durrington Walls to the River Avon.
Parker Pearson suspects that
Durrington Walls consisted of at least 300 houses, making it the largest
village of its time in northwestern Europe.
New radiocarbon dates of an antler
pick used for digging indicate that the Stonehenge
cursus, a 3-kilometer-long earthen enclosure framed by parallel ditches, was
constructed about 5,500 years ago. The cursus contains no bones or artifacts.
It may have been either a sanctified or a cursed spot that people avoided,
Thomas suggests. Analyses indicate that this monument was reworked several
times from between 5,500 and 4,000 years ago.
“This landscape had symbolic
importance that was maintained over a long period of time,” Thomas says.
Found in: Archaeology and Humans
New radiocarbon measurements of burned human bones excavated earlier indicate that the famous Stonehenge site in southern England served as a cemetery for at least half a century, from around 5,000 to 4,500 years ago.