What Archaeology Missed Beneath Stonehenge
Introduction For more than a century, Stonehenge has been interpreted as if it were constructed in a dry, stable chalk
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Introduction For more than a century, Stonehenge has been interpreted as if it were constructed in a dry, stable chalk
Read moreUsing the most effective archaeological tool available today (LiDAR), we can peel back the landscape to show how it used
Read moreIntroduction Traditional archaeology has long struggled to explain the function of the Stonehenge Avenue. As a result, it has been
Read moreIntroduction Durrington Walls has long been treated as a problem site. Despite decades of excavation, reinterpretation, and popular retelling, it
Read more1. Introduction — Why This Debate Exists at All The problem with prehistoric archaeology is not a lack of data.It
Read moreChapter 1: Why the Dyke Story Is About to Change For a very long time, Britain’s great dykes have been
Read moreChapter 1 — The Problem with the Story Bainbridge, known in the Roman period as Virosidum, is almost universally described
Read moreIntroduction For half a century, archaeology has leaned on a comforting story: farming was “invented” in the Middle East and
Read more1. Introduction — A New Breakthrough at Stonehenge For over a century, Stonehenge has been framed as a ceremonial arena—a
Read moreIntroduction The a repeat episode of Digging for Britain (Season 11) turns its gaze to Caerfai Promontory Fort—also called Penpleidiau—a
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