Downloaded 2021-09-29T10:49:44Z

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Downloaded 2021-09-29T10:49:44Z Provided by the author(s) and University College Dublin Library in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite the published version when available. Title A decorated megalith from Knowlton Henges, Dorset, England Authors(s) Lewis, Helen; French, Charles; Green, Martin Publication date 2000-07 Publication information PAST, 35 (July 2000): 1-3 Publisher The Prehistoric Society. University College London. Institute of Archaeology. Link to online version http://www.le.ac.uk/has/ps/past/past35.html; http://www.le.ac.uk/has/ps/past/past35.html Item record/more information http://hdl.handle.net/10197/5550 Downloaded 2021-09-29T10:49:44Z The UCD community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters! (@ucd_oa) © Some rights reserved. For more information, please see the item record link above. Registered Office University College London, Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY NUMBER 35 JULY 2000 A DECORATED MEGALITH FROM KNOWLTON HENGES, DORSET, ENGLAND During the Spring 2000 season of the Wyke Down project (see French et al. forthcoming) an exciting archaeological discovery was made. We were informed by Mr. Robert Antell that two large stones ploughed out of the southern henge at Knowlton, Dorset c. 30 years ago were located on his farm (Knowle Hill Farm, part of the Shaftesbury Estate). Mr. Antell suggested that the stones came from the bank of the south-eastern section of the henge (Fig. 1), and that one stone had artwork on it. The two stones were found and examined. They appear to be heathstone, an iron-rich sarsen stone, which is found locally at the edge of tertiary deposits, but this is yet to be confirmed. An outcrop is known to exist near Cranborne just to the northeast, and field walking adjacent to Knowle Hill has shown that fragments of Fig. 1 Knowlton Southern Henge, showing heathstone (up to c. 30 cm in size) are located nearby. the location from which the megaliths are reported to have been found (after Ordnance Survey 1901. 1:2,500 (in inches)). The first stone found is rectangular, roughly 60 cm wide, 105 cm long and 18 cm thick, and has a design of four concentric rings pecked into its centre on one side (Fig. 2). The design is reminiscent of patterns of concentric circles found on Grooved Ware pottery from Down Farm, c. 4 km upstream. This appears to be a fairly rare motif for Grooved Ware, but has been found on at least 4 vessels, one from Henge I at Wyke Down I, and three from two postholes and a pit outside of the henge at the Wyke Down II site at Down Farm (Green 1987; Cleal 1991, 1999). The design would fit with Shee-Twohig's (1981, 107) passage grave motif lb or 2b (concentric circles). The second stone is rectangular and roughly 60 cm wide, 80 cm long and 15 cm thick. No art was found on this stone. Both stones have calcium carbonate concretions on one of their flat sides, suggesting that they were buried or lying with those faces downwards for some time. Some of this covers the concentric rings on the first stone, Fig 2. Megalith with concentric ring suggesting that this side was facing downwards, perhaps as a coverslab pattern from Knowlton Southern Henge (photograph: C. French) on a cist, and that the art is of some antiquity. The discovery of megalithic artwork in this area, and especially of this type, is almost unprecedented. In the nearby area, examples of megalithic carved stones are limited to the Bronze Age daggers and spearheads (thought to be moulds) on a stone from Badbury barrow (Warne 1866, 57; Grinsell 1958, 107). The exact position of this barrow, excavated in the 19th century, is unknown, but it was located somewhere near Badbury Rings, c. 6 km to the south of Knowlton. The design found on the stone from Knowlton is, however, reminiscent of Neolithic megalithic art found in the classic areas of Ireland, Anglesey, the Mersey valley, Orkney Islands, Brittany and Iberia (see Shee-Twohig 1981), which might suggest that the stones are Neolithic and relate directly to the southern henge. This henge was classified by Atkinson (1951) as being one of his Type II henges, which are often associated with the presence of internal stone circles, and there is the possibility that engraved stones might occur in these. A piece of worked chalk was found during excavation of a trench through the henge ditch at Knowlton (Burrow and Gale 1995) and a Neolithic decorated chalk lump was found in the Monkton Up Wimborne shaft to the north (Green 2000). Besides this, in this region Neolithic stone carving appears to have been seen only in the engraved circular and linear motifs found on the chalk walls of ditch segments making up the Flagstones enclosure (near Dorchester) (Woodward 1988; Healy 1997), and on smaller stones and chalk lumps from sites further afield, such as Windmill Hill, Wiltshire (Smith 1965, 134), Stonehenge Bottom, Wiltshire (Vatcher 1969) and North Marden, West Sussex (Drewett 1986). Megaliths with the type of carvings seen on the stone from Knowlton are usually associated with tombs of various types, suggesting perhaps that the stones might originate from some type of Neolithic grave within the henge or in the immediate vicinity. But a Neolithic date cannot be definitely ascribed to these stones from Knowlton. The closest parallel in the region comes from Winterborne Came barrow 18b (Came Down, near Dorchester), in which two possible Early/Middle Bronze Age cairns were covered with stones decorated with three concentric circles (Fig. 3) (after Fig. 3 'Came tumulus' and an 'incised stone Warne 1866, 37; Grinsell 1958, 107). Also, several round barrows from Came' showing the only known record in the region are reported to have had large stones covering cists, of similarly decorated stones from the region, or even used in stone circles at the bases of barrows (e.g. from Winterborne Came barrow 18b, near Osmington Down barrows, Woodyates barrow C and Badbury Dorchester (from Warne 1866, 37) barrow) (Wame 1866). Given this, it may be that some later monument or burial located in or near this part of the Knowlton southern henge is represented. Whether these stones are truly associated with the southern henge itself, with some other adjacent site, or were introduced here from a more distant site is unknown. No stones were located in the area covered by the Bournemouth University geophysical survey, although the henge bank was said to have not responded well to the techniques used (Burrow and Gale 1995). No other decorated stones of the type from Knowle Hill Farm are known to have been found from Knowlton, but heathstone slabs were used in Knowlton Church in the central henge, including one very large block. Possibly some of these are re-used from earlier monuments. The stones are now located at the museum at Down Farm (address in footnotes), where they await further examination. We would like to thank Phillip Rymer, Robert Antell and the Shaftesbury Estate for permission to move and re-house the stones, and Mike Allen, Richard Bradley, Clare Pinder, Brian Pittman and Gary Martin for their help. Thanks also to the library and the President and Fellows of Newnham College, Cambridge, who allowed access to their copy of Warne's 1866 book, and gave permission to copy Figure 3. Helen Lewis1, Charles French1 and Martin Green2 1 Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Downing St. Cambridge CB2 3DZ 2 Down Farm, Woodcutts, Dorset SP5 5RY Burrow, S. and Gale, J. 1995. Survey and excavation at Knowlton Rings, Woodland Parish, Dorset 1993- 5. Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeology Society, 117, 131-2. Cleal, R. 1991. Cranborne Chase - the earlier prehistoric pottery. In Barrett, J., Bradley, R. and Hall, M. (eds.) Papers on the Prehistoric Archaeology of Cranborne Chase, 134-200. Oxbow Monograph 11. Oxford: Oxbow Books. 1999. Introduction: The what, where, when and why of Grooved Ware. In Cleal, R. and MacSween, A. (eds.) Grooved Ware in Britain & Ireland, 1-8. Neolithic Studies Group Seminar Papers 3. Oxford: Oxbow Book Drewett, P. 1986. The excavation of a Neolithic oval barrow at North Marden, West Sussex, 1982. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 52, 31-51. French, C. A. I., Lewis, H. A., Allen, M. J. and Scaife, R. G. Forthcoming. Palaeoenvironmental and archaeological investigations on Wyke Down in the upper Allen valley, Cranborne Chase, Dorset, England. Interim Summary Report for 1998-9. Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society. Green, M. 1987. A second henge and Neolithic buildings uncovered on Wyke Down, Cranborne Chase, Dorset. PAST, 27, 1-2. 2000. A Landscape Revealed. 10,000 Years on a Chalkland Farm. Brimscombe Port: Tempus. Grinsell, L. V. 1958. The Archaeology of Wessex. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd. Healy, F. 1997. Site 3. Flagstones. In Smith, R. J. C., Healy, F, Allen, M. J., Morris, L., Barnes, I. and Woodward, P. J. Excavations along the route Of the Dorchester by-pass, Dorset, 1986-8, 27-48. Wessex Archaeology Report No. 11. Ordnance Survey. 1901. Dorset Sheet 16/13. 2nd edition. Shee-Twohig, E. 1981. The Megalithic Art of Western Europe. Oxford: Clarendon. Smith, I. E 1965. Windmill Hill and Avebury.. Excavations by Alexander Keiller 1925-1939. Oxford: Clarendon. Vatcher, F. de M. 1969. Two incised chalk plaques near Stonehenge Bottom. Antiquity, 43, 310-311. Warne, C. 1866. The Celtic Tumuli of Dorset. London: John Russell Smith. Woodward, P. J. 1988. Pictures of the 'Neolithic: discoveries from the Flagstone House excavations, Dorchester, Dorset. Antiquity, 62, 266-274 .
Recommended publications
  • Pottery Technology As a Revealer of Cultural And
    Pottery technology as a revealer of cultural and symbolic shifts: Funerary and ritual practices in the Sion ‘Petit-Chasseur’ megalithic necropolis (3100–1600 BC, Western Switzerland) Eve Derenne, Vincent Ard, Marie Besse To cite this version: Eve Derenne, Vincent Ard, Marie Besse. Pottery technology as a revealer of cultural and symbolic shifts: Funerary and ritual practices in the Sion ‘Petit-Chasseur’ megalithic necropolis (3100–1600 BC, Western Switzerland). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, Elsevier, 2020, 58, pp.101170. 10.1016/j.jaa.2020.101170. hal-03051558 HAL Id: hal-03051558 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03051558 Submitted on 10 Dec 2020 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 58 (2020) 101170 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Journal of Anthropological Archaeology journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jaa Pottery technology as a revealer of cultural and symbolic shifts: Funerary and ritual practices in the Sion ‘Petit-Chasseur’ megalithic necropolis T (3100–1600 BC,
    [Show full text]
  • Recent Survey of a Megalithic Stone Alignment at Byse
    Recent Survey of a Megalithic Stone Alignment at Byse Srikumar M. Menon, Manipal School of Architecture and Planning, Manipal – 576 104 Mayank N. Vahia, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai and Manipal Advanced Research Group, Manipal University, Manipal – 576 104 Kailash Rao M., Manipal School of Architecture and Planning, Manipal – 576 104 Introduction: Megalithic monuments are found in profusion in peninsular India (Moorti 1994, 2008) and are generally ascribed to the south Indian Iron Age (Moorti 1994, 2008; Sundara 1975), though recent studies have indicated that megalith construction may well date back into the middle of the Neolithic in south India (Morrison 2005). The term megalith (lit. “built of large stones”) initially arose because of the variety of forms built with boulders or slabs of stone which characterized the monuments of this cultural trait that were noticed early on. Later, the definition was enlarged in scope to include even excavations in soft rock built by similar cultures in regions that lacked boulders and quarries for stone slabs. A large fraction of the megalithic monuments were burials or memorial in nature, such as cist or chamber burials and dolmens, but several other monuments like stone alignments defy the archaeological imagination as to what their purpose could have been. Moorti (1994, 2008) has classified megaliths into sepulchral and non- sepulchral, based on whether or not human remains have been associated with them or not, with sub-divisions based on the form and construction of the monuments. However, this classification is not exactly watertight, with megaliths like menhirs (single standing stone, whether undressed boulder or quarried slab) taking on sepulchral connotations in present-day Kerala region whereas they are essentially non-sepulchral in Karnataka.
    [Show full text]
  • Megaliths and Stelae in the Inner Basin of Tagus River: Santiago De Alcántara, Alconétar and Cañamero (Cáceres, Spain)
    MEGALITHS AND STELAE IN THE INNER BASIN OF TAGUS RIVER: SANTIAGO DE ALCÁNTARA, ALCONÉTAR AND CAÑAMERO (CÁCERES, SPAIN) Primitiva BUENO RAMIREZ, Rodrigo de BALBÍN BEHRMANN, Rosa BARROSO BERMEJO Área de Prehistoria de la Universidad de Alcalá de Henares Enrique CERRILLO CUENCA CSIC, Instituto de Arqueología de Mérida Antonio GONZALEZ CORDERO, Alicia PRADA GALLARDO Archaeologist Abstract: Several projects on the megalithic sites in the basin of the river Tagus contribute evidences on the close relation between stelae with engraved weapons and chronologically advanced megalithic graves. The importance of human images in the development of Iberian megalithic art supports an evolution of these contents toward pieces with engraved weapons which dating back to the 3rd millennium cal BC. From the analysis of the evidences reported by the whole geographical sector, this paper is also aimed at determining if the graphic resources used in these stelae express any kind of identity. Visible stelae in barrows and chambers from the 3rd millennium cal BC would be the images around which sepulchral areas were progressively added, thus constituting true ancestral references throughout the Bronze Age. Keywords: Chalcolithic, megalithic sites, identities, metallurgy, SW Iberian Peninsula INTRODUCTION individuals along a constant course (Bueno et al. 2007a, 2008a) from the ideology of the earliest farmers (Bueno The several works on megalithic stelae we have et al. 2007b) to, practically, the Iron Age (Bueno et al. developed so far shape a methodological and theoretical 2005a, 2010). The similarity observed between this long base of analysis aimed at proving a strong symbolic course and the line of megalithic art is the soundest implementation current throughout the 3rd millennium cal reference to include the symbolic universe of these BC in SW Iberian Peninsula (Bueno 1990, 1995: Bueno visible anthropomorphic references in the ideological et al.
    [Show full text]
  • Neolithic Farmers in Poland - a Study of Stable Isotopes in Human Bones and Teeth from Kichary Nowe in the South of Poland
    Neolithic farmers in Poland - A study of stable isotopes in human bones and teeth from Kichary Nowe in the south of Poland Master thesis in archaeological science Archaeological Research Laboratory Stockholm University Supervisors: Kerstin Lidén and Gunilla Eriksson Author: Staffan Lundmark Cover photo: Mandible from the Kichary Nowe site, photo taken by the author Abstract: The diet of the Stone Age cultures is a strong indicator to the social group, thus farmers and hunters can be distinguished through their diet. There is well-preserved and well excavated Polish skeletal material available for such a study but the material has not previously been subject to stable isotopes analyses and therefore the questions of diets has not been answered. This study aims to contribute to the understanding of the cultures in the Kichary Nowe 2 area in the Lesser Poland district in southern Poland. Through analysis of the stable isotopes of Carbon, Nitrogen and Sulphur in the collagen of teeth and skeletal bones from the humans in the Kichary Nowe 2 grave-field and from bones from the fauna, coeval and from the same area, the study will establish whether there were any sharp changes of diets. The material from the grave-field comes from cultures with an established agricultural economy, where their cultural belonging has been anticipated from the burial context. The results from my study of stable isotopes from the bone material will be grouped by various parameters, culture, attribution to sex and age. The groups will then be compared to each other to investigate patterns within and between the groups.
    [Show full text]
  • "Megalithic Culture" of South India Is Represented by Burials of Considerable Variety
    183 CHAPTER- V PART A: TYPOLOGY The so-called "megalithic culture" of South India is represented by burials of considerable variety. Though the term "megalithic" as applied to this burial complex is inadequate because many structures such as dolmens or cists not even associated with burials are grouped under this term; and some urn and sarcophagus burials unassociated with stone structures qualified as 1 "megalithic" • Again the term "megalithic" is applied to all settlements which yield pottery and iron tools normally found in megalithic burials irrespective of whether these settlements or associated with burials or not. It would I think, be useful to consider a broad definition of the term "megalithic" i.e., as a socio-religious expression of burying the deceased in cemeteries, in graves (which would include primary, secondary and symbolic burial) which may or may not have lithic appendage. One should also note here that the use of iron broadly coincides with this period and forms an "adjunct of this culture" (Moorti 1994 : 1). Therefore some archaeologists prefer to use the term "iron age culture" instead of "megalithic culture". So far as the typological classification of megaliths in India are concerned the attempts of Wheeler (1948) and Krishnaswami (1949 : 35-45) are noteworthy. Later, Leshnik (1974 : 226-227), Agrawal (1982 : 226-227) and Allchins (1983 : 331-33) recognize five basic types of burials i.e., pit burials, urn and sarcophagi burials, rock cut burial cham hers, cist burials and stone alignments. Dikshit and Sundara include many more types like dolmen, menhir, to pi kal and kudai kal.
    [Show full text]
  • The Significance of the Ancient Standing Stones, Villages, Tombs on Orkney Island
    The Proceedings of the International Conference on Creationism Volume 5 Print Reference: Pages 561-572 Article 43 2003 The Significance of the Ancient Standing Stones, Villages, Tombs on Orkney Island Lawson L. Schroeder Philip L. Schroeder Bryan College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/icc_proceedings DigitalCommons@Cedarville provides a publication platform for fully open access journals, which means that all articles are available on the Internet to all users immediately upon publication. However, the opinions and sentiments expressed by the authors of articles published in our journals do not necessarily indicate the endorsement or reflect the views of DigitalCommons@Cedarville, the Centennial Library, or Cedarville University and its employees. The authors are solely responsible for the content of their work. Please address questions to [email protected]. Browse the contents of this volume of The Proceedings of the International Conference on Creationism. Recommended Citation Schroeder, Lawson L. and Schroeder, Philip L. (2003) "The Significance of the Ancient Standing Stones, Villages, Tombs on Orkney Island," The Proceedings of the International Conference on Creationism: Vol. 5 , Article 43. Available at: https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/icc_proceedings/vol5/iss1/43 THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE ANCIENT STANDING STONES, VILLAGES AND TOMBS FOUND ON THE ORKNEY ISLANDS LAWSON L. SCHROEDER, D.D.S. PHILIP L. SCHROEDER 5889 MILLSTONE RUN BRYAN COLLEGE STONE MOUNTAIN, GA 30087 P. O. BOX 7484 DAYTON, TN 37321-7000 KEYWORDS: Orkney Islands, ancient stone structures, Skara Brae, Maes Howe, broch, Ring of Brodgar, Standing Stones of Stenness, dispersion, Babel, famine, Ice Age ABSTRACT The Orkney Islands make up an archipelago north of Scotland.
    [Show full text]
  • Megalithic Astronomy in South India
    In Nakamura, T., Orchiston, W., Sôma, M., and Strom, R. (eds.), 2011. Mapping the Oriental Sky. Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Oriental Astronomy. Tokyo, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. Pp. xx-xx. MEGALITHIC ASTRONOMY IN SOUTH INDIA Srikumar M. MENON Faculty of Architecture, Manipal Institute of Technology, Manipal – 576104, Karnataka, India. E-mail: [email protected] and Mayank N. VAHIA Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, India, and Manipal Advanced Research Group, Manipal University, Manipal – 576104, Karnataka, India. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract: The megalithic monuments of peninsular India, believed to have been erected in the Iron Age (1500BC – 200AD), can be broadly categorized into sepulchral and non-sepulchral in purpose. Though a lot of work has gone into the study of these monuments since Babington first reported megaliths in India in 1823, not much is understood about the knowledge systems extant in the period when these were built – in science and engineering, and especially in mathematics and astronomy. We take a brief look at the archaeological understanding of megaliths, before making a detailed assessment of a group of megaliths in the south Canara region of Karnataka State in South India that were hitherto assumed to be haphazard clusters of menhirs. Our surveys have indicated that there is a positive correlation of sight-lines with sunrise and sunset points on the horizon for both summer and winter solstices. We identify five such monuments in the region and present the survey results for one of these sites, demonstrating their astronomical implications. We also discuss the possible use of megaliths in the form of stone alignments/ avenues as calendar devices.
    [Show full text]
  • The Earliest Stone Monuments: Replication of Megalithic Structures at NIAS
    The Earliest Stone Monuments: replication of megalithic structures at NIAS Srikumar M. Menon Many of you might have been mystified, or even shocked (quite justifiably!) over the last several days when certain mysterious aggregations of boulders made their appearance at certain locations on the NIAS campus. While pleading guilty of this sacrilege, I want to convey briefly the philosophy behind these structures. In a nutshell, these structures replicate megalithic structures, which are prehistoric monuments believed to have been erected in the Iron Age in the Indian subcontinent (roughly 1500BCE – 500BCE). Megaliths are found all over the world and in India, they are densely concentrated in the southern part of the subcontinent. Most megaliths are memorials, though a few types defy an understanding of the purposes for which they were erected. What is certain, however, is that megaliths represent the oldest surviving monuments in stone that we can encounter today. The structure near the lily pool (below) is a crude dolmen – a heavy “capstone” erected over three smaller boulders. There is also a single standing stone, known as menhir, nearby. Fig 2 shows a prehistoric dolmen that resembles this structure. 1 A dolmen and menhir near the lily pool at NIAS The structure in front of the car porch (top) is a dolmen too – slightly more elaborate, wherein three stones are arranged to make a small chamber with a horizontal capstone covering this arrangement. There is a boulder circle surrounding the dolmen, with two vertical stones forming a sort of portal giving entry to the structure. A prehistoric dolmen that resembles this is shown in Fig.
    [Show full text]
  • Megalith Quarries for Stonehenge's Bluestones
    Megalith quarries for Stonehenge’s bluestones Mike Parker Pearson1,*, Josh Pollard2, Colin Richards3, Kate Welham4, Chris Casswell5, Charles French6, Duncan Schlee7, Dave Shaw8, Research Ellen Simmons9, Adam Stanford10, Richard Bevins11 & Rob Ixer1 Geologists and archaeologists have long known that the bluestones of Stonehenge came from the Preseli Hills of west Wales, 230km away, but only recently have some of their exact geo- logical sources been identified. Two of these quarries—Carn Goedog and Craig Rhos-y- felin—have now been excavated to reveal evi- dence of megalith quarrying around 3000 BC —the same period as the first stage of the con- struction of Stonehenge. The authors present evidence for the extraction of the stone pillars and consider how they were transported, including the possibility that they were erected in a temporary monument close to the quar- ries, before completing their journey to Stonehenge. Keywords: Britain, Preseli Hills, Stonehenge, Neolithic, bluestones, dolerite, megaliths, prehistoric quarrying 1 Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31–34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY, UK 2 Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton, Avenue Campus, Southampton SO17 1BF, UK 3 Archaeology Institute, University of the Highlands & Islands, East Road, Kirkwall, Orkney KW15 1LX, UK 4 Department of Archaeology, Anthropology & Forensic Science, Talbot Campus, Bournemouth University, Bournemouth BH12 5BB, UK 5 DigVentures Ltd, 20 Jerusalem Passage, Clerkenwell, London EC1V 4JP, UK 6 Department of Archaeology,
    [Show full text]
  • Prehistoric Western Art 40,000 – 2,000 BCE
    Prehistoric Western Art 40,000 – 2,000 BCE Introduction Prehistoric Europe was an evolving melting pot of developing cultures driven by the arrival of Homo sapiens, migrating from Africa by way of southwest Asia. Mixing and mingling of numerous cultures over the Upper Paleolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic periods in Europe stimulated the emergence of innovative advancements in farming, food preparation, animal domestication, community development, religious traditions and the arts. This report tracks European cultural developments over these prehistoric periods, Figure 1 Europe and the Near East emphasizing each period’s (adapted from Janson’s History of Art, 8th Edition) evolving demographic effects on art development. Then, representative arts of the periods are reviewed by genre, instead of cultural or timeline sequence, in order to better appreciate their commonalities and differences. Appendices identify Homo sapien roots in Africa and selected timeline events that were concurrent with prehistoric human life in Europe. Prehistoric Homo Sapiens in Europe Genetic, carbon dating and archeological evidence suggest that our own species, Homo sapiens, first appeared between 150 and 200 thousand years ago in Africa and migrated to Europe and Asia. The earliest archeological finds that exhibit all the characteristics of modern humans, including large rounded brain cases and small faces and teeth, date to 190 thousand years ago at Omo, Ethiopia. 1 IBM announced in 2011 that the Genographic Project, charting human genetic data, supports a southern route of human migration from Africa via the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait in Arabia, suggesting a role for Southwest Asia in the “Out of Africa” expansion of modern humans.
    [Show full text]
  • Forteviot, Perthshire 2008: Excavations of a Henge Monument and Timber Circle Data Structure and Interim Report
    Forteviot, Perthshire 2008: Excavations of a henge monument and timber circle Data Structure and Interim Report by Gordon Noble and Kenneth Brophy Forteviot Henge Excavations 2008 Summary This interim report will describe the provisional outcomes of our excavations, part of the SERF (Strathearn Environs and Royal Forteviot) Project, in a field immediately to the S of Forteviot village, Perth and Kinross, in August 2008. Our focus in the 2008 summer season was two elements of the Forteviot cropmark complex: a possible late Neolithic henge monument, and an adjacent pit-defined setting. Both these features are located within the large Neolithic palisaded enclosure, partially excavated in 2007 (see Brophy & Noble 2008). Trench 2 revealed information both about the henge monument, but also extensive later reuse of the site. Trench 3 was opened over the location of the possible timber-setting; this was not identified in the trench, but a large pit with burnt material and a number of other features were found, not all of which are identifiable as cropmarks. In many ways, this was a much more difficult season of excavation than Trench 1 in 2007, partly due to wetter weather conditions, but also to a large extent because of the complexity of the archaeology, especially in Trench 2, which one would not normally expect of a cropmark site. This report therefore contains results and interpretations that are provisional and a second season of excavation in and around this henge will be required in 2009 which will, we hope, answer some of the many questions raised by the 2008 season.
    [Show full text]
  • New Discovery of Rock Art and Megalithic Sites in the Central Plain of China
    Rock Art Research 2012 - Volume 29, Number 2, pp. 157-170. TANG H. 157 KEYWORDS: Cupule – Rock art – Megalith – Cross-dating – Central Plain of China NEW DISCOVERY OF ROCK ART AND MEGALITHIC SITES IN THE CENTRAL PLAIN OF CHINA Tang Huisheng Abstract. Since the turn of this century, an immense amount of rock art has been discovered in Henan Province (located in the Central Plains region of China), centred at Mt Juci. Over 90 percent of the rock art consists of cupules and the remainder comprises linear groove patterns, chessboard-like designs and other motifs. The rock art features mainly ground motifs and patterns chiselled by metal tools. There are a variety of cupules, varying in size, depth and arrangement, e.g. occurring in rows, concentric patterns and so on. Rock art was executed on over 10 000 boulders, some of which could be classified as megalithic sites, such as menhirs, dolmen, ‘stone altars’ and the like. The cupules and the megaliths from the Central Plains region appear to show a structural context, which will help us to understand and identify their cultural nature, contents and ages. Based on cross-dating, their production could be considered as spanning the Neolithic and the Bronze Age. Since the turn of this century, a large quantity of a considerable surprise — not only to rock art studies, rock art has been discovered at Mt Juci, in Henan Pro- but also to archaeological studies and studies of early vince (located in the Central Plains region of China), Chinese history. Herein, we introduce the rock art of which has captured public attention and stimulated the Central Plain based on information mainly from Mt extensive interest in rock art studies.
    [Show full text]