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Keyword: wiltshire

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  • Man on Led Zeppelin IV Cover Identified 52 Years After Album’s Release

    11/13/2023 1:03:29 PM PST · by Red Badger · 87 replies
    pitchfork.com ^ | November 8, 2023 | By Madison Bloom
    Exactly 52 years after the release of Led Zeppelin’s fourth studio album—widely referred to as Led Zeppelin IV—the identity of the man gracing its cover has been revealed, The Guardian and The New York Times report. The cover artwork famously features an elderly man hinged at the waist, weighed down by a bale of long twigs strapped to his back. Now, a research fellow in South West England named Brian Edwards has discovered that the original source of the scene: a late Victorian era photograph of a Wiltshire thatcher named Lot Long. A visiting research fellow with the regional history...
  • Digging Band of Brothers: Time Team Special with Tony Robinson (2023)

    10/06/2023 7:16:13 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 18 replies
    YouTube ^ | Premiered September 30, 2023 | Time Team Official
    NEWDigging Band of Brothers:Time Team Special with Tony Robinson (2023)- FULL EPISODE | 1:36:56Time Team Official | 187K subscribers587,149 views | Premiered September 30, 2023
  • Before Stonehenge monuments, hunter-gatherers made use of open habitats

    05/03/2022 7:29:39 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 23 replies
    Phys dot org ^ | April 27, 2022 | Public Library of Science
    The authors combine pollen, spores, sedimentary DNA, and animal remains to characterize the pre-Neolithic habitat of the site, inferring partially open woodland conditions, which would have been beneficial to large grazing herbivores like aurochs, as well as hunter-gatherer communities. This study supports previous evidence that the Stonehenge region was not covered in closed canopy forest at this time, as has previously been proposed.This study also provides date estimates for human activity at Blick Mead. Results indicate that hunter-gatherers used this site for 4,000 years up until the time of the earliest known farmers and monument-builders in the region, who would...
  • Thanks to pig remains, scientists uncover extensive human mobility to sites near Stonehenge

    03/17/2019 11:25:38 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 8 replies
    EurekAlert! ^ | March 13, 2019 | Richard Madgwick, Cardiff University
    A mutli-isotope analysis of pigs remains found around henge complexes near Stonehenge has revealed the large extent and scale of movements of human communities in Britain during the Late Neolithic. The findings... provide insight into more than a century of debate surrounding the origins of people and animals in the Stonehenge landscape. Neolithic henge complexes, located in southern Britain, have long been studied for their role as ceremonial centers. Feasts that were unprecedented at the time were held at these locations. Experts have theorized that these events brought in many people beyond the surrounding area of the henge sites, but...
  • 4,000-year-old 'shaman' burial near Stonehenge has a golden secret

    12/16/2022 9:23:11 AM PST · by BenLurkin · 28 replies
    livescience.com ^ | https://www.livescience.com/4000-year-old-shaman-burial-near-stonehenge#:~:text=Tom%20Metcalfe,publi
    Stone tools found in a 4,000-year-old grave near Stonehenge have traces of gold on their surfaces that indicate they were used to fashion gold ornaments. In 1801, archaeologists found the assemblage of Bronze Age artifacts, including the stone tools, in a barrow or burial mound from about 1800 B.C. near the village of Upton Lovell, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) west of Stonehenge. The assemblage(opens in new tab) includes flint axes, a necklace of beads of polished stone and dozens of bone points — possibly from another necklace and the fringe of a garment. The collection, which is now on...
  • Hoard of 161 Roman coins found beneath campsite in Wiltshire

    10/13/2022 6:15:06 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 30 replies
    The National (UK) ^ | May 04, 2022 | Soraya Ebrahimi
    Three metal detector fans have discovered a Roman hoard worth tens of thousands of pounds while spending the weekend camping in south-west England.The group were staying in a field near the ancient village of Pewsey, in Wiltshire, when they found the treasure trove a mere six paces from where they had pitched their tent.Robert Abbott, 53, switched on his device after breakfast one morning and very quickly found something.At first the computer shop owner from Essex, near London, uncovered only discarded metal tent pegs. But he dug a little deeper and hidden below was a valuable silver Roman coin called...
  • Ancient mass migration transformed Britons' DNA

    12/23/2021 2:55:07 PM PST · by Cronos · 37 replies
    Bbc ^ | 22 December 2021 | Paul Rincon
    Scientists have uncovered evidence for a large-scale, prehistoric migration into Britain that may be linked to the spread of Celtic languages. The mass-movement of people originated in continental Europe and occurred between 1,400 BC and 870 BC. The discovery helps to explain the genetic make-up of many present-day people in Britain. Around half the ancestry of later populations in England and Wales comes from these migrants. ...When the newcomers arrived, the existing British population traced most of its ancestry to people who arrived at the end of the Neolithic, around the time Stonehenge was being built. They were part of...
  • New tests show neolithic pits near Stonehenge were human-made

    12/12/2021 11:55:05 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 22 replies
    Guardian (of Jihadists) UK ^ | Tue 23 Nov 2021 | Dalya Alberge
    ...a series of deep pits were discovered near the world heritage site of Stonehenge last year... Now scientific tests have proved that those gaping pits, each aligned to form a circle spanning 1.2 miles (2km) in diameter, were definitely human-made, dug into the sacred landscape almost 4,500 years ago. The structure appears to have been a boundary guiding people to a sacred area, because Durrington Walls, one of Britain’s largest henge monuments, is located precisely at its centre. The site is 1.9 miles north-east of Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, near Amesbury in Wiltshire... While part of the circle has not...
  • Stonehenge under the hammer: stones sold 100 years ago for £6,600

    09/21/2021 7:44:49 PM PDT · by ameribbean expat · 7 replies
    He had been sent to the auction by his wife, so legend has it, to buy a set of dining chairs. Instead, barrister Cecil Chubb’s eye was caught by lot No 15: a few acres of Wiltshire downland – plus one ancient, crumbling, mysterious monument. Exactly 100 years ago, Stonehenge was sold to Chubb for £6,600. Three years later he gave the magnificent stones to the nation and since then it has become one of the most beloved and most visited historical sites in the world.
  • Return of the death mound: Neolithic-style tombs are back in fashion after 5,000 years...

    09/09/2018 3:22:14 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 14 replies
    Mailonline ^ | 7 September 2018 | Phoebe Weston and Harry Pettit
    Full Headline: Return of the death mound: Neolithic-style tombs are back in fashion after 5,000 years as Britain runs out of space to bury the dead These stunning images show the Milky Way etched across the night sky over a Neolithic burial barrow, which will open this weekend as part of a Stone Age tradition being resurrected across Britain. The Soulton Long Barrow in Shropshire is only the third of its kind to be opened in modern times. The burial chamber is based on ancient solution to the lack of burial space in Britain used by our Neolithic ancestors almost...
  • Stonehenge: First residents from west Wales

    08/03/2018 12:19:18 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 43 replies
    BBC ^ | 2 August 2018 | Angus Davison
    Researchers have shown that cremated humans at Stonehenge were from the same region of Wales as the stones used in construction. The key innovation was finding that high temperatures of cremation can crystallise a skull, locking in the chemical signal of its origin. The first long-term residents of Stonehenge, along with the first stones, arrived about 5,000 years ago. While it is already known that the "bluestones" that were first used to build Stonehenge were transported from 150 miles (240 km) away in modern-day Pembrokeshire, almost nothing is known about the people involved. The scientists' work shows that both people...
  • BREAKING NEWS: Police Say Couple Poisoned By "Novichok" Near Russian Couple Incident, Threat Trump

    07/04/2018 4:44:49 PM PDT · by Nextrush · 52 replies
    Nextrush Free ^ | 7/4/2018 | Nextrush/Self
    "A man and a woman found unconscious in Wiltshire were poisoned by Novichok-the same nerve agent that poisoned ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal, police say" BBC News story published at around 6pm Eastern-2300 British Summer Time 7/4/2018 Last Saturday in Amesbury, England Charlie Rowley and Dawn Sturgess became ill and went unconscious. Soon workers in hazmat suits were in the area. At first police thought it might be a drug related incident. First media reports appeared this morning with the words "mysterious substance" attached to what caused the pair to go unconscious. But late tonight in the UK "Novichok" was identified...
  • Wiltshire pair 'poisoned by nerve agent' (UNITED KINGDOM)

    07/04/2018 3:20:29 PM PDT · by Nextrush · 18 replies
    BBC News ^ | 7/4/2018 | BBC
    A man and a woman found unconscious in Wiltshire were poisoned by Novichok, the same nerve agent as ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal, police say. The couple, believed to be Charlie Rowley and Dawn Sturgess, are in a critical condition having been found unconscious at a house on Saturday. Police say no one else has presented the same symptoms. There was "nothing in their background" to suggest the pair were targeted, the Met Police said.... Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said it could not be confirmed whether the nerve agent came from the same batch that Mr. Skripal, and his...
  • In pictures: Inside Silbury Hill

    11/03/2007 10:05:42 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 28 replies · 127+ views
    BBC ^ | Wednesday, October 24, 2007 | unattributed
    One theory is that the top of the hill was lopped off around the time of the Battle of Hastings or even earlier.
  • Hill fort said to be where King Arthur's Guinevere was born has lasted 3,000 years... under siege

    06/29/2015 7:09:11 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 28 replies
    Guardian UK ^ | Saturday, June 27, 2015 | Robin Stummer
    A powerful group of senior archaeologists are sharpening their trowels to fight "ethically unacceptable" plans they say will destroy one of the nation's greatest Iron Age treasures. Old Oswestry Hill Fort, an imposing ancient feature that dominates the skyline on the fringe of the Shropshire market town, is on the frontline of an increasingly bitter struggle pitting historians and residents against the local authority and central government. At stake is the ancient rural surroundings of the hill fort, an elaborate, 3,000-year-old earthwork dubbed "the Stonehenge of the Iron Age". It is said to have been the birthplace of Queen Ganhumara...
  • Silbury gives up its final secret

    05/16/2008 3:42:40 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 15 replies · 79+ views
    Guardian ^ | Monday May 12, 2008 | Maev Kennedy
    Jim Leary, the archaeological director for English Heritage throughout the work, thinks he has solved a riddle which archaeologists have fretted over for centuries: why thousands of people piled up 35 million baskets of chalk into the largest artificial hill in Europe, now part of the Stonehenge World Heritage site. It wasn't the final structure, but the staggering contribution of work which was important, he now believes, marking a site of immense but only guessable significance to the hunters and farmers of Bronze Age Wiltshire... the archaeologists and engineers are convinced there is no secret chamber, prehistoric passage or treasure...
  • Roman clues found at ancient hill (UK).

    03/10/2007 7:42:54 AM PST · by Jedi Master Pikachu · 19 replies · 516+ views
    BBC ^ | Saturday, March 10, 2007
    English Heritage is conducting stabilisation work at the site Archaeologists have found traces of a Roman settlement at a 5,000-year-old landmark man-made hill in Wiltshire.English Heritage believes there was a Roman community at Silbury Hill about 2,000 years ago. The 130ft Neolithic mound near Avebury - one of Europe's largest prehistoric monuments - is thought to have been created some 3,000 years earlier. Experts carrying out a project to stabilise the hill say the site may have been a sacred place of pilgrimage. Human activity English Heritage geophysicist Dr Neil Linford said: "We are really excited by this discovery...
  • Peer's fears over 'pyramid' hill [ Silbury Hill ]

    06/09/2006 8:22:52 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 5 replies · 219+ views
    BBC ^ | Monday, 17 May, 2004 | unattributed
    A peer has compared an ancient monument to the pyramids in a row over the government's right to roam laws. Lord Avebury says he is "stunned" the Countryside Agency's wants to label Silbury Hill in Wiltshire as "unimproved chalk grassland". The move could lead to ramblers having free access to the hill, which opponents fear may cause damage. However, the agency says it took the decision because the 4,700-year-old hill is a "man-made structure". Silbury Hill is comparable with the ancient Pyramids of Egypt or the Great Pyramids of Mexico" -- Lord Avebury Lord Avebury spoke at the public inquiry...
  • Stone Age satnav: Did ancient man use 5,000-year-old travel chart to navigate across Britain

    09/15/2009 1:13:16 PM PDT · by BGHater · 24 replies · 1,495+ views
    The Daily Mail ^ | 15 Sep 2009 | David Derbyshire
    It's considered to be one of the more recent innovations to help the hapless traveller. But the satnav system may not be as modern as we think. According to a new theory, prehistoric man navigated his way across England using a similar system based on stone circles and other markers. The complex network of stones, hill forts and earthworks allowed travellers to trek hundreds of miles with 'pinpoint accuracy' more than 5,000 years ago, amateur historian Tom Brooks says. The grid covered much of southern England and Wales and included landmarks such as Stonehenge and Silbury Hill, claims Mr Brooks,...
  • Mayan 'apocalypse' crop circle appears at Silbury Hill...

    A 350ft crop circle of an ancient Mayan symbol, said to be a sign of an impending apocalypse, has appeared next to Silbury Hill in Wiltshire. The giant pattern - thought to represent a traditional Mayan head-dress - appeared next to the tallest prehistoric man-made mound in Europe last week. Members of the crop circle community believe the mystic symbol is a signal of the end of the 5,126-year Mayan 'Long Count' calendar on December 21, 2012 Karen Alexander, a crop circle enthusiast, said: "This is one of the most interesting crop circles I have ever seen. It is definitely...