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Avebury Henge - the history books are wrong [18:07]
YouTube ^ | July 1, 2023 | Lambourne Photography

Posted on 05/14/2024 1:47:35 PM PDT by SunkenCiv

In this video, I visit Avebury Henge and Stone Circle ... the largest in the world 馃ぉ Built and much altered during the Neolithic period, roughly between 2850 BC and 2200 BC, the henge survives as a huge circular bank and ditch, encircling an area that includes part of Avebury village. Within the henge is the largest stone circle in Britain - originally of about 100 stones - which in turn encloses two smaller stone circles.

The history books state it was built for ceremonial purposes, but they forget to take into account the geological data. If they did, they would have known that much of the area was under water at that time.

Thanks goes to Robert John Langdon @RobertJohnLangdon for his fascinating in-depth research and publications. Please spend a moment to check out his channel.
Avebury Henge - the history books are wrong | 18:07
Lambourne Photography | 1.92K subscribers | 34,936 views | July 1, 2023
Avebury Henge - the history books are wrong | 18:07 | Lambourne Photography | 1.92K subscribers | 34,936 views | July 1, 2023

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: History; Science; Travel
KEYWORDS: archaeoastronomy; avebury; aveburyhenge; godsgravesglyphs; megaliths; moat; paulwhitewick; silbury; silburyhill; wiltshire
[link set to start at the 3 minute mark]

Transcript
0:04foreign
0:34[Music]
0:55[Music]
1:02thank you
1:08the weather is so unpredictable
1:12I left the house and it was Blue Skies
1:15now it's rain and wind
1:19so today we are going to eighth Brewery
1:23Avery is the largest stone circle
1:28in the world
1:32approximately 100 Stones were
1:36brought here to build a stone circle
1:41about 5 000 years ago
1:46not many of them
1:48uh exist today and they've all been
1:51carted off
1:53and repurposed
1:56over the centuries
2:01as you can see I'm driving through Avery
2:04now
2:05through the center of the stone circle
2:16this weather this grim
2:23brighter over there
2:26pretty much twice now
2:29and is it coming our way
2:34right let's park her up and give it a
2:38give it a go
Time Index Set to Here
3:00the area around Avery in Wiltshire
3:03contains an extraordinary cluster of
3:05monuments dating to the Mesolithic
3:08Neolithic and Bronze Age
3:12this video focuses on Avery henge and
3:15its Stone circles probably the most
3:17well-known prehistoric monument second
3:19to Stonehenge in Britain
3:22within one and a half miles of Avery are
3:25many other prehistoric sites that were
3:27built around the same time and therefore
3:29no doubt share a connection to Avery
3:32these sites include
3:34windmill Hill built over 6 000 years ago
3:38much older than they've rehenge and
3:40towards the end of the Mesolithic age
3:43Adam and Eve Stones all that is
3:46remaining of the ancient beckhampton
3:49Avenue
3:51longstones long barrel built around four
3:54and a half thousand years ago
3:57silbury Hill the largest man-made
3:59mountain in Europe built around four and
4:02a half thousand years ago
4:05West Kenneth long barrel built
4:085650 years ago
4:13East kennet longborough which is yet to
4:17be excavated
4:21the sanctuary built around 4 500 years
4:25ago
4:27West Kennett Avenue wants a one and a
4:30half mile route lined with 100 pairs of
4:32stones connecting Avery and The
4:35Sanctuary
4:38it would be remiss of me not to give a
4:40mention to Valley of stones the site
4:43where the Assassin stones used to build
4:45Avery came from
4:47the sites in and around Avery were a
4:50significant place for prehistoric people
4:52who gathered here to build monuments
4:55made of Earth Timber and stone for over
4:572 000 years
5:00today this unique landscape forms part
5:03of the UNESCO Stonehenge and Avery world
5:06heritage site reflecting its
5:09International importance
5:12so I am approaching Avery at the moment
5:16the largest stone circle in the world
5:24before me is the
5:26Western most
5:28outer ditch
5:31this uh
5:34Neolithic
5:36Earthworks were created approximately
5:39four and a half thousand years ago its
5:41purpose
5:42is still unclear although
5:47many people
5:49generically stamp it as being
5:52for ceremonial purposes potentially
5:55religious
5:57uh that could be true
6:00but
6:01much like my five field video recently
6:05published
6:06they keep forgetting
6:09that much of this was underwater
6:13in fact I would be
6:15underwater right now four and a half
6:18thousand years ago
6:34[Music]
6:41[Music]
6:50[Music]
7:10thank you
7:14[Music]
7:27this is the start of the
7:31the well-known outer Stone Circle
7:36comprised originally from
7:39100 sarson stones
7:42sourced from
7:44the valley of stones
7:46in five field
7:47a couple of miles to the east
7:50some of these weighed up to 30 tons in
7:53weight
7:56many have disappeared
8:00these ones
8:03which I've disappeared have been
8:04identified
8:06as these concrete bollards here
8:10to show the original location
8:12interestingly though many of the stones
8:15have been buried and no one knows why
8:19although there was a some evidence found
8:22of one of the buried Stones it had a uh
8:25a skeleton buried with it some 700 years
8:29ago so I'm not sure what they were up to
8:33oh
8:43so most folk know uh Avery for its uh
8:47large Stone Circle
8:49well what's left of it
8:52the largest in the world
8:56but larger still is the set of worth
8:59Works surrounding it
9:04there's one giant circular ditch
9:08and the Earth which was cut out of that
9:10ditch was placed on the outer Bank
9:14now this is significant because
9:16immediately because they placed it on
9:19the outer Bank we know
9:20it's not defensive as all uh
9:24defensive Earthworks they cut and then
9:27fill
9:28the inner Bank
9:33so why was that then
9:37and the ditch that we see today even
9:39though it's still vast
9:42uh
9:44it's roughly three meters deep in places
9:48that's actually only a third of what it
9:50was
9:52there have been some excavations and
9:55uh it's been proved that the ditch did
9:59go down to nine meters originally
10:02but of course over time
10:06uh the the bank and the sides have
10:10collapsed and eroded
10:13filling in the ditch
10:17you know four and a half thousand years
10:18is a long time
10:20but why make a ditch
10:23nine meters deep
10:27for ceremonial purposes
10:41Avery Stonehenge or Stone Circle as it's
10:44also called
10:45it's best seen from the air but because
10:48of the size of it
10:50a drone
10:52won't be able to capture it
10:54in full View
10:57from directly above
10:59because of the 120 meter maximum
11:03altitude restriction or 400 feet
11:07foreign
11:09but that's where lidar can come in and
11:12help us
11:13[Music]
11:47[Music]
11:55[Music]
12:01now
12:04the kennet comes
12:07all the way down here
12:09today runs through the village of Avery
12:15and then
12:16further south
12:19but
12:21four and a half thousand years ago
12:24that Kenneth River
12:26would have been approximately 25 meters
12:31deeper than it is today
12:33it would also been
12:35about a hundred times wider than it is
12:38today
12:43a good chunk of that land as far as the
12:45eye can see
12:47West
12:49of this outer ditch
12:51would have been underwater
12:53[Music]
12:55right
13:03[Applause]
13:05[Music]
13:23this Stitch contrary to what the history
13:26books say
13:28abruptly stops in the middle there
13:33there's about
13:36a eight to ten meter section
13:40where the ditch
13:41starts and stops
13:45I have almost like a giant letter c
13:49so there was an opening to the ditch on
13:51that side
13:53and according to geological uh
13:56groundwater levels
13:58back then the river Kenneth
14:03would have been
14:04level without opening
14:08therefore filling these ditches with
14:10water
14:18essentially this was one giant moat
14:23and the center
14:27was no doubt some kind of
14:29trading station
15:01foreign
15:07[Music]
15:51foreign
15:54[Music]
15:58foreign
16:02[Music]
16:10is one of the principal sites of
16:12Neolithic Britain that we can visit
16:14today
16:16it was built and altered over many
16:19centuries from
16:212850 BC to 2200 BC
16:26it is one of the largest and undoubtedly
16:29the most complex of Britain's surviving
16:32Neolithic hinge monuments
16:36good
16:37it is quite likely that before the stone
16:40circles were erected Timber circles and
16:43structures may have originally filled
16:45the area within the bank and ditch
16:48as at other hinges in this part of
16:50Britain
16:52the exact sequence of construction of
16:55the banks ditches and stone circles at
16:58Avery is still not completely understood
17:04at some stage two Avenues of stones were
17:08also built linking the great Eng with
17:11other ceremonial sites to the West at
17:14beckhampton and to the south at Overton
17:17Hill
17:19foreign
17:20Discovery suggests they may have even
17:23been a Third Avenue heading Southwest to
17:26the huge man-made mound of silvery Hill
17:32whatever the reason for this great henge
17:34being built whether ceremonial or for
17:37trade it remains one of the most magical
17:40and breathtaking sights in Britain today
17:50thank you
17:52[Music]
17:59foreign
18:00[Music]
18:03foreign

1 posted on 05/14/2024 1:47:35 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
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Huge thanks to Amanda Chadburn, Jill Chapman, Alex Bayliss and Jim Leary for inspiration on this weeks video.
The Day Silbury Hill Collapsed | 11:42
Paul Whitewick | 117K subscribers | 707,578 views | May 5, 2024
The Day Silbury Hill Collapsed | 11:42 | Paul Whitewick | 117K subscribers | 707,578 views | May 5, 2024
Transcript
0:02July 2007 and one of the wetest July on record Amanda Chadburn would receive a phone
0:09call hello oh hi David Amanda yes um silvery Hill has collapsed oddly this
0:22wasn't the first phone call uttering those exact [Music]
0:27words Amanda and the team have been working on the conservation of the mound securing its integrity
0:35and safety after centuries of shafts and tunnels had been dug by drilling from the top and points
0:42on the side this collapse could be a major setback for that project as it turned out though this
0:48collapse gave English Heritage the opportunity to understand silbury Hill more than anyone had done
0:54in the last half [Music] Millennia so Hill is an artificial chalk Mound mainly chalk Su clay
1:04in fact it's completely man-made Now by and large the mound was built using chalk from the immediate
1:11vicinity I sat here for Millennia confusing the random passer by the antiquarian of old
1:22and perhaps even the more modern scientific and academic world that was until just a few
1:27years ago 1663 and John Abrury draws the first known image of this Monument
1:33he writes about silbury and the surrounding monuments publishing Monumenta Britannica he
1:39mused at the notion that this could be very old pre-s Saxon pre-roman
1:44prehistory 1740 it insteps William stukeley and he publishes his work on silbury and the
1:53entire avebury landscape and he does a very iconic famous picture with aere Stone Circle
2:00sat top in the middle and an Avenue either side Beck Hampton to the West and West kennet
2:07Avenue to the east now and behold center stage at the bottom is of course silbury
2:13Hill William stukeley saw this as a viewing platform a centerpiece for this
2:22landscape back to the claps but not that claps you see there was another 7 years
2:32prior May the 29th 2000 the first collapse and Amanda Chadburn receives the first phone
2:39call hello Amanda silbury Hill has collapsed it appears that a large hole has appeared in
2:49the top of silbury hill now knowing the approximate age of this place to you and
2:54I that sounds quite odd but to Amanda it didn't because she knew the history
2:59of this place place in great detail the largest artificial mound in the northern
3:04hemisphere Amanda and her team needed a plan they needed a task which would
3:12ensure the long-term security and integrity of this Monument it wouldn't be an easy task but
3:18perhaps for the first time in two or 300 years it would be about conservation not
3:24archaeology so how exactly was there a collapse the monument we knew had been there for a few
3:32thousand years at least more importantly how was it that the collapse was just a hole in the top
3:39that sunk down to answer that we need to go back some time in fact 1776 the Duke of Northumberland
3:48employed a team of miners to open up a shaft on the mound now the nature of his reputation
3:55really preceded the good Duke in fact some would refer to him as a treasure hunter rather than an
4:01early archaeologist nonetheless he sunk a shaft right down very long way expecting to find all
4:09kinds of Untold treasures and he found absolutely nothing other than chalk now you'd have to wait
4:18for another 75 years before another excavation took place the archaeological Institute newly
4:24formed tasked a man called Mereweather to Tunnel once again but this time in from the side once
4:31again expecting to find all kinds of artefact's and things that they could use to perhaps date
4:36this but once again he found absolutely nothing a century would now pass until a very keen BBC 2
4:46director by the name of David Attenborough would ask Richard Atkinson to conduct a further dig now
4:52Atkinson would tunnel once again and would try and unearth silbury Hills mystery he did use new
4:58techniques and new standings and he did report something that the previous tunnellers had not
5:04now Atkinson was probably the first to suggest as far as I can tell that Sil was built in three
5:10different stages first of all the original Turf Mound followed by another chalk Mound followed
5:16by choke Mound on top of that now as far as I can tell again the funding was cut for Atkinson and
5:22he suggested that they should leave his Tunnel open for future Generations kind of made sense
5:28but also English Heritage or the history of works at the time so that was probably unsafe
5:32so they should look at backfilling at least part of it so was stukeley right was this a platform
5:38on the landscape it is such a curious place for this to be positioned we aren't high up at all in
5:43fact we're in a valley the valley that this mound sits in allows it to rise up to the height of the
5:49surrounding Hills it's like the centerpiece of a bowl or a dish with the center meeting up to the
5:56surrounding edges and if we travel across to West kennet long Barrow on the horizon while something
6:01even more Curious greets [Music] us top of this hill we have West kennet longbarrow and that gives
6:11us an entirely different view of silbury Hill but not the physical view you see West kennet
6:17longbarrow in its first Inception its first form was built just over 1, 1,200 years before silbury
6:27Mound [Music] so why is that date so important how does it relate to silbury Hill well the first
6:39burial here as we said 1,200 years before silbury Hill but then it was continued to be used the
6:46graves were infilled reused and perhaps for the next thousand years or so it was used as maybe a
6:53ceremonial Place one Theory by Mike Parker Pearson is that because of the timing of the final closure
7:02of West kennet longbarrow with these huge sarsons around a thousand years after its first use well
7:09they came at almost the same time as the first stages of silbury Hill Mike goes on to suggest
7:16the uh the change in society the change in people burial practices the the incoming of this new
7:24technology brought about by the Bronze Age or maybe just maybe that this was the last stand
7:30for the near liic people back to the claps Amanda and her team have been working hard planning the
7:37conservation work for years now the involvement of the company scanska is vital for their work
7:43and supporting Amanda and the team they find the 1968 lintel and when they start digging in early
7:502007 so theyd found a number of voids started to open up above that tunnel so they started to uh
7:57sure it up and uh brace it a bit further they also found some uh more antlers and again this
8:04time now they could radiocarbon date these with a lot more accuracy by specialist Alex bayliss so
8:10why was this July 2007 collapse so important well it actually created a void closer to the center of
8:19silbury Hill a tip a top stage two or phase two of silbury Hill was now exposed with organic matter
8:32Jill Campbell analysed grass stems from this tip of Silbury 2 and found a specific species
8:38of grass that takes 10 to 15 years to establish this means it was now possibly growing on the
8:46hill at that point after Phase 2 snail shells also present implies that this was left for
8:52some period of time they were also able to reaffirm the start date 2400 BC based
8:59on the original turf or grass layer before any of this took place any construction here
9:05the turf Mound 2,400 BC give or take one or two generations how specific is that
9:12based on the numerous new results the almost per chance opportunity to date the different
9:17silbury Hills that formed its overall One Construction we have a new set of data to
9:23help nothing really other than construction tool tools and material were found within
9:31it to uh give us an indication of the purpose of its build we do now have that 20400 BC start date
9:40which is the main thing that can help give us the context of this Monument within the surrounding
9:45landscape maybe just maybe as short as a 100 years or maybe even one person's lifetime would
9:52have seen the entirety of this built however that could be as much as 3 or 400 years so
9:59phase one was built within a generation of the 2,400 BC date Phase 2 was built and then phase
10:07three and we now know as well there was at least a 10 or 15E period at least between Phase 2 and
10:16phase three because of that organic matter that was found Jim leary suggests that because of this
10:21Gap this potential minimum 10 to 15 years between Phase 2 and three silbury was constructed over a
10:28long period of time time perhaps centuries based on this standstill period it indicates that it
10:34was not a continuous progress and perhaps as Mike Parker Pearson suggests that this was a Last Stand
10:42by the neolithic in the face of new technologies emerging around them we may never truly understand
10:49the purpose of silbury Hill when it was built but the story of the collapses the story of the 17th
10:55century antiquarians through to the more modern archaeologists and of of course Amanda Chadburn
11:00and her team help us give a much better sense of the the place of this monument in the landscape
11:07today potentially what it was for perhaps those that built it did see a huge change in the way of
11:15life new technologies evolving and this was their their Last Stand now if you like the prehistory
11:21type videos we do you can go and watch this one just here AC Smith mapped all of this area
11:26on Horseback and he found many secrets that we wouldn't have known about if it wasn't for him
11:42[Music]

2 posted on 05/14/2024 1:48:17 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...

3 posted on 05/14/2024 1:48:47 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: SunkenCiv

It was under water?

May need to oil the henge........


4 posted on 05/14/2024 1:51:57 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: SunkenCiv

Interesting.


5 posted on 05/14/2024 1:52:51 PM PDT by ComputerGuy (Heavily-medicated for your protection)
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To: Red Badger

A rusty hinge is an annoyance.


6 posted on 05/14/2024 1:53:36 PM PDT by Islander7 (There is no septic system so vile, so filthy, the left won't drink from to further their agenda.)
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To: Red Badger

Was this built by Merlin like Stonehenge?


7 posted on 05/14/2024 2:01:38 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Red Badger

Don’t quit your day job.

My bad. This is your day job!


8 posted on 05/14/2024 2:36:07 PM PDT by TexasGator
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To: SunkenCiv

I was at Avebury in 2008. It was awesome.


9 posted on 05/14/2024 2:39:06 PM PDT by EvilCapitalist (Pets are no substitute for children)
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To: SunkenCiv; hellinahandcart

Wife and I have been there.

One of my favorite places....


10 posted on 05/14/2024 2:42:52 PM PDT by sauropod ("This is a time when people reveal themselves for who they are." James O'Keefe Ne supra crepidam)
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To: EvilCapitalist

Been there a couple of times.


11 posted on 05/14/2024 2:43:32 PM PDT by sauropod ("This is a time when people reveal themselves for who they are." James O'Keefe Ne supra crepidam)
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To: SunkenCiv

I hope your realize that most people cannot read without punctuation don’t you?


12 posted on 05/14/2024 3:03:11 PM PDT by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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To: SunkenCiv

Why is it that everything that an archiologist enciunters must be some sort of religeous symbol or a ceremonial site?


13 posted on 05/14/2024 3:08:16 PM PDT by Highest Authority (DemonRats are pure EVIL)
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To: EvilCapitalist

I also visited with my family in 2014


14 posted on 05/14/2024 5:35:52 PM PDT by TheConservator (To bar Trump from the presidency, libtards are happy to trash 235 years the rule of law)
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To: higgmeister

Other trolls piss and moan that there’s no transcript.


15 posted on 05/14/2024 5:52:32 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: EvilCapitalist; sauropod; hellinahandcart; TheConservator
Looks like they built a fortress with a moat during the Neolithic. Phil Harding, the main archaeologist for years with Time Team, is from Wiltshire I think, but regardless, it's easy to see why his main interest is the stone ages. :^)

16 posted on 05/14/2024 5:55:40 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: Red Badger

I wonder where they buried the ave?


17 posted on 05/14/2024 6:27:33 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: SunkenCiv

oh


18 posted on 05/15/2024 9:54:35 AM PDT by higgmeister (In the Shadow of The Big Chicken! )
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To: SunkenCiv
I'm trying to imagine the number of labor/man-hours it took to build that thing.
Man O Man.
19 posted on 05/15/2024 10:06:56 AM PDT by blam
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