| May 29, 2008 Scientists unlock mysterious history of Stonehenge
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WASHINGTON (AP) - England's enigmatic Stonehenge served as a
burial ground from its earliest beginnings and for several hundred
years thereafter, new research indicates.
Dating of cremated remains shows burials took place as early as
3000 B.C., when the first ditches around the monument were being
built, researchers said Thursday.
And those burials continued for at least 500 years, when the
giant stones that mark the mysterious circle were being erected,
they said.
"It's now clear that burials were a major component of
Stonehenge in all its main stages," said Mike Parker Pearson,
archaeology professor at the University of Sheffield in England and
head of the Stonehenge Riverside Archaeological Project.
In the past many archaeologists had thought that burials at
Stonehenge continued for only about a century, the researchers
said.
"Stonehenge was a place of burial from its beginning to its
zenith in the mid third millennium B.C. The cremation burial dating
to Stonehenge's sarsen stones phase is likely just one of many from
this later period of the monument's use and demonstrates that it
was still very much a domain of the dead," Parker Pearson said in
a statement.
The researchers also excavated homes nearby at Durrington Walls,
which they said appeared to be seasonal homes related to
Stonehenge.
"It's a quite extraordinary settlement, we've never seen
anything like it before," Parker Pearson
said. The village
appeared to be a land of the living and Stonehenge a land of the
ancestors, he said.
There were at least 300 and perhaps as many as 1,000 homes in
the village, he said. The small homes were occupied in midwinter
and midsummer.
The village also included a circle of wooden pillars, which the
researchers have named the Southern Circle. It is oriented toward
the midwinter sunrise, the opposite of Stonehenge, which is
oriented to the midsummer sunrise.
The research was supported by the National Geographic Society,
which discusses Stonehenge in its June magazine and will feature
the new burial data on National Geographic Channel on Sunday.
The researchers said the earliest cremation burial was a small
group of bones and teeth found in pits called the Aubrey Holes and
dated to 3030-2880 B.C., about the time with the first
ditch-and-bank monument was being built.
Remains from the surrounding ditch included an adult dated to
2930-2870 B.C., and the most recent cremation, Parker Pearson said,
comes from the ditch's northern side and was of a 25-year-old
woman. It dated to 2570-2340 B.C., around the time the first
arrangements of large sarsen stones appeared at Stonehenge.
According to Parker Pearson's team, this is the first time any
of the cremation burials from Stonehenge have been radiocarbon
dated. The burials dated by the group were excavated in the 1950s
and have been kept at the nearby Salisbury Museum.
In the 1920s an additional 49 cremation burials were dug up at
Stonehenge, but all were reburied because they were thought to be
of no scientific value, the researchers said.
They estimate that up to 240 people were buried within
Stonehenge, all as cremation deposits.
Team member Andrew Chamberlain suggested that that the cremation
burials represent the natural deaths of a single elite family and
its descendants, perhaps a ruling dynasty.
A clue to this, he said, is the small number of burials in
Stonehenge's earliest phase, a number that grows larger in
subsequent centuries, as offspring would have multiplied.
Parker Pearson added: "I don't think it was the common people
getting buried at Stonehenge - it was clearly a special place at
that time. One has to assume anyone buried there had some good
credentials."
The actual building and purpose of Stonehenge remain a mystery
that has long drawn speculation from many sources.
And not all archaeologists agree with Parker Pearson's theory.
Indeed, the June issue of National Geographic Magazine quotes
Mike Pitts, editor of the journal British Archaeology, as saying
some details of the theory are problematic with gaps remaining to
be filled. Uses of the landscape in the area for farming and
grazing, for example, do not seem compatible with a ritualized
place.
"The value of this interpretation is not just the idea of
linking stones and ancestors, but that it works with the entire
landscape," Pitts was quoted as saying.
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