Stonehenge likely made with stones from older monument
LONDON: Remains of an ancient monument in west Wales indicate stones that stood at the site may have been dismantled and used to build the Neolithic standing circle Stonehenge, a new study suggested on Friday.
Researchers believe some stones used at Stonehenge, near Salisbury in southwest England, were used in an earlier monument 175 miles (280 kilometres) away in southwest Wales.
The team behind the discovery from University College London (UCL) said there were key elements linking Stonehenge, built in 3000 BC, with the earlier stone circle named Waun Mawn.
They suggest bluestones — distinct blue and grey stones that originated in Wales — may have been moved by the ancient builders of Stonehenge as their society migrated.
The findings, due to be published in the journal Antiquity, would explain why the monoliths were moved so far when most similar standing circles from the time were built close to their quarries.
Waun Mawn is one of the oldest stone circles in Britain and the country’s third largest.
Its surrounding region was an important and densely settled area until 3000 BC when activity seems to have abruptly ended.
“It’s as if they just vanished. Maybe most of the people migrated, taking their stones — their ancestral identities — with them,” archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson, from UCL, said.
Published in Dawn, February 13th, 2021