Stonehenge’s hefty altar stone came all the way from Scotland

Published August 15, 2024
WILTSHIRE: The altar stone at the Stonehenge monument, located on Britain’s Salisbury plain, is seen underneath two bigger Sarsen stones in this undated photo released on Wednesday.—Reuters
WILTSHIRE: The altar stone at the Stonehenge monument, located on Britain’s Salisbury plain, is seen underneath two bigger Sarsen stones in this undated photo released on Wednesday.—Reuters

LONDON: At the centre of Stonehenge lies the ‘altar stone’, a hefty slab of sandstone whose origin and purpose have been among the famed megalithic monument’s enduring mysteries. A new analysis has revealed that this rectangular colossus took a remarkable journey to become part of one of humankind’s ancient wonders.

Its geochemical fingerprint is a perfect match for bedrock found in northeastern Scotland, researchers said on Wednesday, indicating that the Altar Stone — weighing an estimated six tons — was transported roughly 700-750 kilometres by Stonehenge’s creators to Salisbury Plain in southern England.

The findings left the researchers stunned. No stone from any other monument dating to that time period is known to have been transported such a distance. “We couldn’t believe it,” said Anthony Clarke, a doctoral student in geology at Curtin University in Australia and lead author of the study published in the journal Nature. The common belief for the past century had been that it had been sourced from Wales like some other Stonehenge large components.

The Altar Stone, recumbent rather than erect, is 4.9 metres long, a metre (3-1/4 feet) wide and half a metre (1-2/3 feet) thick. It is grey-green sandstone, though its rippled and weathered surface now has a red-brown colouration.

Transporting it such a distance — perhaps by both land and sea — suggests a degree of societal organisation among Britain’s Neolithic communities unexpected for the time when it was moved, thought to have been about 4,600-2,500 years ago, roughly contemporaneous with ancient Egypt’s great pyramids.

Published in Dawn, August 15th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Parliament’s place
Updated 17 Sep, 2024

Parliament’s place

Efforts to restore parliament’s sanctity must rise above all political differences and legislative activities must be open to scrutiny and debate.
Afghan policy flux
17 Sep, 2024

Afghan policy flux

AS the nation confronts a major militancy problem in the midst of poor ties with Kabul, there is a dire need to...
HIV/AIDS outbreak
17 Sep, 2024

HIV/AIDS outbreak

MULTIPLE factors — the government’s inability to put its people first, a rickety health infrastructure, and...
Political drama
Updated 16 Sep, 2024

Political drama

Govt must revisit its plans to bring constitutional amendments and ensure any proposed changes to judiciary are subjected to thorough debate.
Complete impunity
16 Sep, 2024

Complete impunity

ZERO per cent. That is the conviction rate in crimes against women and children in Sindh, according to data shared...
Melting glaciers
16 Sep, 2024

Melting glaciers

ACCELERATED glacial melt in the Indus river basin, as highlighted recently by the National Disaster Management...