Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 21
Curtin Study Traces Stonehenge Altar Stone 450 Miles, With Humans Moving Final 250
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 21

Curtin Study Traces Stonehenge Altar Stone 450 Miles, With Humans Moving Final 250

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 21

Summary

  • Curtin University researchers say Stonehenge’s Altar Stone likely began in northeast Scotland and reached Wiltshire after a roughly 450-mile journey.
  • Geological analysis and ice-sheet modeling suggest glaciers carried the stone only about 200 miles to Dogger Bank in the North Sea, leaving prehistoric people to move it the final 250 miles.
  • Anthony Clarke said that last leg was likely deliberate and staged, requiring planning, coordination and detailed knowledge of the landscape rather than natural ice transport into southern England.
  • The findings address a long-running debate over how Stonehenge was built and add to a recent run of discoveries reshaping understanding of ancient Britain.

Insights

A glacier moved it 200 miles, humans 250. What does this epic journey reveal about Stonehenge's builders?
Why did ancient Britons rescue a six-tonne stone from a land now submerged beneath the North Sea?