Posted on 06/13/2006 7:27:54 AM PDT by billorites
Bluestone Delivery Service, When it has to absolutely, positively get there sometime during the next inter-glacial period.......
Coming from a cold part of the world I always thought that the stones might have been dragged over snow and ice but this makes even more sense.
Usually the most simple explanation is correct.
Your all mad! Merlyn made the stones MARCH to Stonehenge! Duh!
Interesting book on Stonehenge by Harry Harrison.
This rousing adventure story set in the Europe of 1473 B. C. Above all sets out to entertain. But it also has a rather more serious purpose - to expound another theory about the reasons for the building of the fascinating stone circles.
Nah, gotta be aliens. What is Stonehenge if not the original crop circle?
"..............it's only a model."
There's something I've wondered about for years, and that is, what happened to the missing stones at Stonehenge? When you look at it, it's obvious that some are missing, and it would be quite a feat to haul one off!
Maybe there just weren't enough stones of a suitable size there in the first place, and so only those were used in its construction. There's enough there to do the astronomical observations and, enough to show exactly where the others should be placed to finish the job.
So what are the odds that the stones were in a much older structure and the glacier destroyed the place and pushed the stones to where they were re-used by the builders of Stonehenge? I mean, Anthony West has a credible theory that the foundation blocks (carved blocks set under the pyramids and Sphinx) under the Giza plateau are perhaps hundreds of thousands years old, matching the age of blocks at Obiados (sp?).
"Look, look. Look, this is what I was asked to build. Eighteen inches. Right here, it specified eighteen inches. I was given this napkin, I mean..."
Makes sense to me, my grandfather lives in Devon and we would occasionally drive over to see a place called Haytor. Its basically the top of a mountain that was ripped off by the glaciers and dropped on the moors in Cornwall. I often wondered why this explanation was never given for the boulders used in Stonehenge. They may have been more conveniently located than people think.
related pageTo all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)
Hoagland is favoring that idea. The foundations of the pyramids would be 200,000 years old. We ought to keep that idea around since it would hard to dismiss outright without putting unnecessary limits on our speculation.
Schoch and West have looked carefully at the erosion around the base of the Sphinx. Their conclusions seem too solid to ignore, that the erosion had to happen when there was abundant rain on the Giza plateau, and that would have to be more than ten thousand years ago. When one looks at the Sphinx dimensions, it is silly to assert that the face and body were carved at the same time, by people who took great care to NOT distort dimensions when building, decorating. Anthony West is a first rate researcher, and it's silly to dismiss his theories just because they don't fit the 'established' notions. Such perspective on the nature of the solar system (historically) is an example of how 'established' notions can be fundamentally flawed and in need of major revision ... masses of evidence were ignored and put aside because they didn't fit the established notions.
And, if a glacier moved them over to Stonehenge, how many Blue Stones have been found 'strewn along the route' from the outcropping?
If memory serves (too busy at the moment to check specific sources) many were indeed hauled off for building stone. The same thing happened at nearby Avebury until the authorities stopped the practice.
The same thing has occurred around the world, including at the Parthenon, the Egyptian pyramids, etc. Humans are notorious and inventive scroungers.
Only way to prove any of this is a 'time machine' and since that will probably never be a reality we will just have to play around with theories.
Exactly. I don't have any particular trouble with the concept of large stones being moved and deposited, but since it is the Salisbury PLAIN, why should it be expected that the glaciers made a delivery of a pile of like stones in a convenient spot? :')
Did Swiss Immigrant Build Stonehenge?An early Bronze Age archer, whose grave was discovered near the stone circle last year, may have helped build the monument. And tests on the chemical components of his tooth enamel showed he grew up in the region that is now Switzerland... The 4,000-year-old man was identified as an archer because of the flint arrowheads found by his body, along with other artifacts belonging to the Beaker Culture that flourished in the Alps during the Bronze Age... The 100 artifacts found in his exceptionally rich grave, discovered about three miles from Stonehenge, indicate he was "obviously a very prominent man" and likely involved in constructing the monument, Wessex Archaeology spokesman Tony Trueman said. Although the indigenous British originally came from mainland Europe, they settled thousands of years before the arrival of the archer, who clearly belonged to a different culture, marked by a new style of pottery, the use of barbed flat arrow heads, copper knives and small gold ornaments. His grave contained teeth and bones as well as two gold hair tresses, three copper knives, flint arrowheads, wrist guards and pottery. The copper knives came from Spain and France. The gold dated to as early as 2470 B.C., the earliest dated gold objects found in Britain.
by Michael McDonough
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.