Stonehenge's altar stone originated in Scotland, hundreds of miles away

Daniel Sims

Posts: 1,533   +46
Staff
In brief: Stonehenge is easily the oldest and most mysterious of Britain's iconic monuments. Its true purpose might never be definitively uncovered, but researchers continue to infer details regarding when and how it was constructed. A new study suggests that a central component of the structure originated on the opposite end of Great Britain, implying a high degree of sophistication in the societies that built it.

A paper recently published in the scientific journal Nature presents evidence that the altar stone at the center of Stonehenge was transported to the site from northeastern Scotland, over 460 miles away. If the study's assertions are accurate, then the stone is by far the megalith's most exotic component.

Upon analyzing fragments of the altar stone, a large slab that lies flat underneath other collapsed stones, researchers discovered that its composition closely matches Old Red Sandstone from the Orcadian Basin in northeast Scotland. The study's authors theorize that the 13,000-pound rock was transported by sea to the site of Stonehenge in southern England.

Click here to enlarge

Observers have long understood that the monument could only have been created by complex cultures capable of coordinating large construction projects and sourcing materials from far away. The bluestones, which form a circle in the interior, likely came from southern Wales, over 100 miles away. Still, a Scottish origin for the altar stone defies prior knowledge about Stonehenge's origins.

The UNESCO World Heritage Site was built in stages by multiple groups of people over around 2,000 years. The area had been important to Mesolithic hunter-gatherers since roughly 8,000 BC, but Neolithic farmers likely created the initial earthen ditches surrounding the site sometime around 3,000 BC.

Click here to enlarge

A circle of local sarsen stones and Welsh bluestones was erected within the earthen ring around 2,500 BC (roughly the same time the Egyptian pyramids were built), with the altar stone roughly at its center. They were probably rearranged in the 2,200s BC, and the site remained in use until around 1,500 BC. Parts of the structure are carefully aligned so that the sun lights them during the summer and winter solstices.

Whoever constructed Stonehenge shaped the rocks into their current form and used indentations to lock them into place. The achievement is particularly impressive because the builders would've only had access to stone-age tools and would not have possessed the wheel.

Permalink to story:

 
The problem with these published articles lately is how to verify their origin, whether they are AI helped or research based.

I asked ChatGPT about the fastest flying insect on this planet and though it suggested some dragonfly species then added that it actually isn’t true. Because although people don’t know it, a swallow is actually an insect and as such the fastest flying insect on the Earth.

And when it comes to new scientific research nowadays I take all of it with a pinch of salt. Apologies to all scientists that do their hard and interesting work out there.
 
And when it comes to new scientific research nowadays I take all of it with a pinch of salt. Apologies to all scientists that do their hard and interesting work out there.

As you should.

Scientific conclusions contain loads of nuance which the general media is uninterested in as that's too subtle to draw in eyeballs with flashy headlines and grossly oversimplified hot takes.
 
I'm not saying that Extraterrestrials did it...but are you going to tell me that humans transported thousands of tons of heavy rock hundreds of miles in times when the wheel wasn't even invented???.....🤔
 
I'm not saying that Extraterrestrials did it...but are you going to tell me that humans transported thousands of tons of heavy rock hundreds of miles in times when the wheel wasn't even invented???.....🤔

Logs. They're like wheels but better for very heavy objects. Also boats but maybe not for these. I'd never invent a computer but people with a better imagination did.

Don't sell human ingenuity short.
 
Logs. They're like wheels but better for very heavy objects. Also boats but maybe not for these. I'd never invent a computer but people with a better imagination did.

Don't sell human ingenuity short.
Human ingenuity? At the time when these first humans didn't even know how to think complex enough to create a civilization....we are talking about many centuries before even the first civilization was formed.
 
Human ingenuity? At the time when these first humans didn't even know how to think complex enough to create a civilization....we are talking about many centuries before even the first civilization was formed.

Yes yes yes you must be faaar more cleverer than those nasty brutes 6500 years ago. That they didn't form what you describe as 'civilization' because they didn't "know how" as opposed to they didn't need to. You're not designing microchips because you don't need to, but if you studied microchip design in college and then worked at TSMC or Intel, then you could.

There is a difference.
 
Yes yes yes you must be faaar more cleverer than those nasty brutes 6500 years ago. That they didn't form what you describe as 'civilization' because they didn't "know how" as opposed to they didn't need to. You're not designing microchips because you don't need to, but if you studied microchip design in college and then worked at TSMC or Intel, then you could.

There is a difference.
A civilization was the very first indication of human complex thinking, as it required them to think as a community to accomplish their needs of building....unless Stonehenge was built by a single "human".
 
I'm not saying that Extraterrestrials did it...but are you going to tell me that humans transported thousands of tons of heavy rock hundreds of miles in times when the wheel wasn't even invented???.....🤔
Um, what? Stonehenge's sarsen stones were erected nearly 1000 years after the invention of the wheel, and the particular stone in question weighs about 6 tons, not "thousands of tons".
 
Back