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German "Stonehenge" marks oldest observatory
Scientific American ^ | December 08, 2003 | Madhusree Mukerjee

Posted on 12/09/2003 11:32:48 PM PST by Bernard Marx

A vast, shadowy circle sits in a flat wheat field near Goseck, Germany. No, it is not a pattern made by tipsy graduate students. The circle represents the remains of the world's oldest observatory, dating back 7,000 years.

Coupled with an etched disk recovered last year, the observatory suggests that Neolithic and Bronze Age people measured the heavens far earlier and more accurately than scientists had imagined.

Archaeologists reported the Goseck circle's identity and age this past August. First spotted by airplane, the circle is 75 meters wide. Originally, it consisted of four concentric circles--a mound, a ditch and two wooden palisades about the height of a person--in which stood three sets of gates facing southeast, southwest and north, respectively.

On the winter solstice, someone at the center of the circles would see the sun rise and set through the southern gates. Although aerial surveys have demarcated 200-odd similar circles scattered across Europe, the Goseck structure is the oldest and best preserved of the 20 excavated thus far, and it is the first circle whose function is evident.

Though called the German Stonehenge, it precedes Stonehenge by at least two millennia. The linear designs on pottery shards found within the compound suggest that the observatory was built in 4900 B.C. Perhaps the observatory's most curious aspect is that the roughly 100-degree span between the solstice gates corresponds with an angle on a bronze disk unearthed on a hilltop 25 kilometers away, near the town of Nebra. The Nebra disk, measuring 32 centimeters in diameter, dates from 1600 B.C. and is the oldest realistic representation of the cosmos yet found.

It depicts a crescent moon, a circle that was probably the full moon, a cluster of seven stars interpreted to represent the Pleiades, scattered other stars and three arcs, all picked out in gold leaf from a background rendered violet-blue--apparently by applying rotten eggs. The two opposing arcs, which run along the rim, are 82.5 degrees long and mark the sun's positions at sunrise and sunset. The lowest points of the two arcs are 97.5 degrees apart, signifying sunrise and sunset on the winter solstice in central Germany at the time.

Likewise, the uppermost points mark sunrise and sunset on the summer solstice. The sun's position at solstice has shifted slightly over the past millennia, notes Wolfhard Schlosser of the Ruhr University in Bochum, so that the angle between sunrise and sunset is now slightly farther apart than when the Nebra disk and the Goseck circle were made (by 1.6 and 2.8 degrees, respectively).

Nearby excavations of wood-and-clay houses have turned up a variety of grains and evidence of domesticated goats, sheep, pigs and cows. Farmers reached this part of the world some 500 years before they built the solar observatory. Although these earliest Neolithic agriculturists most likely measured only the sun's movements, over millennia they came to quantify the lunar cycle and the positions of constellations.

The Pleiades, which depart the northern sky in spring and reappear in the fall, still mark crop cycles for many farmers around the world. The Nebra disk may have been a ritual object or, more likely--given its precision--a calculational tool used with observations at Goseck or a similar site to determine planting and harvest times.

The third arc on the disk, believes Francois Bertemes of the University of Halle-Wittenberg, is the stuff of legend. The ancients did not understand how the sun could set in the west and end up in the east the next morning. Representations of a disk in a ship, from Bronze Age Egypt and Scandinavia, reveal an age-old belief that a ship carried the sun across the night sky. The Nebra disk is the first evidence of such a faith in central Europe.

That the land-bound cultivators knew of ships is no surprise: Bertemes points out that travelers spread the latest in Bronze Age technology as well as mythology. The third gate at Goseck remains mysterious, however: it points north, but not quite. It may have nothing to do with astronomy, for the compound was more than a solar station. In addition to pottery shards and arrowheads within, excavators found the decapitated skulls of oxen, apparently displayed on poles, and parts of two human skeletons. The human bones were cleaned of flesh before being buried.

Similar skeletons--several with cut marks or with arrowheads in their necks--have turned up in other circles, but archaeologists cannot agree on whether they attest to human sacrifices or to uncommonly gory funeral rites. Nevertheless, such ceremonies anoint the site as a temple, Bertemes notes--and show that science was inextricably entangled with superstition since Neolithic times.

Madhusree Mukerjee writes from Frankfurt, Germany.


TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: godsgravesglyphs
Couldn't find this posted anywhere, not even by Blam, and it definitely caught my interest. It's just one more indication our ancient ancestors were extremely intelligent and far more advanced than we usually credit them with being.
1 posted on 12/09/2003 11:32:49 PM PST by Bernard Marx
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To: Bernard Marx; blam; *Gods, Graves, Glyphs; abner; Alas Babylon!; Andyman; annyokie; bd476; ...
Gods, Graves, Glyphs
List for articles regarding early civilizations , life of all forms, - dinosaurs - etc.

Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this ping list.

2 posted on 12/09/2003 11:38:50 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: RadioAstronomer
Sorry, couldn't resist this one.
3 posted on 12/09/2003 11:40:16 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: Bernard Marx
Another "oldest" thread.
4 posted on 12/09/2003 11:53:15 PM PST by Consort
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To: Bernard Marx

Goseck Observatory

5 posted on 12/10/2003 12:12:16 AM PST by blam
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To: Bernard Marx
Barbarians Get Sophisticated (Nebra "Sky Disc")
6 posted on 12/10/2003 12:14:55 AM PST by blam
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To: Bernard Marx
"It's just one more indication our ancient ancestors were extremely intelligent and far more advanced than we usually credit them with being."

Just in fits and starts and then another catastrophe arrives and wipes it all out.

7 posted on 12/10/2003 12:17:36 AM PST by blam
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To: farmfriend
May I be added to your Gods, Graves, Glyphs list?

8 posted on 12/10/2003 12:28:17 AM PST by nerdwithamachinegun (All generalizations are wrong.)
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To: Bernard Marx
Oh, what a great article. Thanks so much for posting it. Absolutely LOVE this stuff!
9 posted on 12/10/2003 7:42:56 AM PST by EggsAckley (..................."Dean's got Tom McClintock Eyes".........................)
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To: Consort
Another "oldest" thread.

I'm familiar with the Nebra sky disk discovery, which is old news. Can you point me to the thread you refer to on the "observatory"? Several searches didn't reveal one.

10 posted on 12/10/2003 7:44:32 AM PST by Bernard Marx (I have noted that persons with bad judgment are most insistent that we do what they think best.)
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To: msdrby
ping
11 posted on 12/10/2003 7:50:16 AM PST by Prof Engineer (We're Hobbit Artillery. Trolls tremble at our feet.)
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To: farmfriend
WOW! Thanks. :-)
12 posted on 12/10/2003 7:55:07 AM PST by RadioAstronomer
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To: blam
Just in fits and starts and then another catastrophe arrives and wipes it all out.

You're talking about "civilization," and what I had in mind was the ability of ancient peoples to think and adapt. Maybe they believed the sun was tugged from west to east overnight by a boat but they still were able to put its yearly risings and settings to practical use. They perceived a pattern and were smart enough to see its implications for agriculture, etc. They were just as intelligent as we are.

13 posted on 12/10/2003 8:16:47 AM PST by Bernard Marx (I have noted that persons with bad judgment are most insistent that we do what they think best.)
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To: nerdwithamachinegun
Consider yourself added. If you ever change your mind, this can be a high volume list, just let me know.
14 posted on 12/10/2003 8:52:39 AM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: Bernard Marx
"They were just as intelligent as we are."

I agree and they have been for thousands and thousands of years.

15 posted on 12/10/2003 9:44:29 AM PST by blam
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To: Bernard Marx
Can you point me to the thread you refer to on the "observatory"?

That was another poster.

16 posted on 12/10/2003 10:39:44 AM PST by Consort
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To: Bernard Marx
Thanks!
17 posted on 12/10/2003 2:04:27 PM PST by ruoflaw
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To: ruoflaw; EggsAckley
I'm happy you found the story to be of interest.
18 posted on 12/10/2003 3:47:45 PM PST by Bernard Marx (I have noted that persons with bad judgment are most insistent that we do what they think best.)
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To: Bernard Marx
Civilization - yes, they must have had some sort of specialization in their society to have builders and users of the observatory function.
19 posted on 12/10/2003 5:47:05 PM PST by marsh2
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To: Bernard Marx
BTTT
20 posted on 02/06/2004 5:14:50 PM PST by carpio
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