Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

 

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The Sideshow

    Origin of Stonehenge rocks discovered

    The origin of some of Stonehenge's ancient stones have been discoveredResearchers in the United Kingdom have finally solved a major piece of Stonehenge's enduring mystery: the place of origin for some of the ancient structure's most-famous rock formations.

    The National Museum Wales and Leicester University have identified the source as Craig Rhos-y-felin, located more than 100 miles from the Stonehenge site. But this discovery, of course, just opens on to another mystery--namely, just how and why an ancient culture carved and transported the giant stones over such a great distance.

    "Being able to provenance any archaeologically significant rock so precisely is remarkable," Dr. Rob Ixer of Leicester University told the BBC. "However, given continued perseverance, we are determined that we shall uncover the origins of most, if not all of the Stonehenge bluestones so allowing archaeologists to continue their speculations well into a third century."

    This past year has offered a wealth of new research and discoveries at the Stonehenge site, including last month's announcement that the worshipers at the ancient monument had erected "sun worship" sites there.

    Over the past nine months, the researchers compared mineral content and textural relationships of the rhyolite debitage stones found at Stonehenge and were finally able to pinpoint the location to within several meters of their source. Ninety-nine percent of the samples could be matched to the rocks found at Craig Rhos-y-felin, which differ from all others found in south Wales.

    Further research should help the researchers eventually understand how the rocks made the long journey to Stonehenge sometime between 3000 and 1600 BC. "Many have asked the question over the years, how the stones got from Pembrokeshire to Stonehenge," said Dr. Richard Bevins, National Museum Wales. "Thanks to geological research, we now have a specific source for the rhyolite stones from which to work and an opportunity for archaeologists to answer the question that has been widely debated."

    Some working theories speculate that the rocks were transported over water up the Bristol Channel and River Avon. However, recent efforts to recreate the voyage, including one in 2000 sponsored by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, have all ended in failure.

    Below is a special episode of 'Who Knew?' about the Winter Solstice, a holiday that has been celebrated through most of human history. Ancient Romans called it Saturnalia, Hopi indians have Soyal, and Christmas, too, is influenced by the celestial calendar.

    Other popular Yahoo! News stories:

    Video: puppies tear open Christmas presents

    Police in Texas town give out gift cards for good driving

    Video: Cat soothes crying baby to sleep

     
    • funmi  •  Toronto, Canada  •  4 months ago
      hello this is jaydee
    • Joseph  •  New York, United States  •  5 months ago
      More stories like this please Yahoo and much less Justin Bieber and Kim Kardashian. Thank you.
      • F. 5 months ago
        Yes, listen to Joseph. More stories like this...please. As for me, you can leave Justin and Kim off your site and I'd be thrilled.
      • rob 5 months ago
        And fewer stories about two bitches wearing the same dress.
      • Bill 5 months ago
        Amen! But instead of less about Justin Twerp Bieber how about nothing about him! I would rather watch grass grow than him.
    • Astrum Incantator  •  Colorado Springs, United States  •  5 months ago
      This is much more interesting than Kim Kardashian or any of the Hollywood gossip. Thanks!
      • JR 5 months ago
        "This just in, the secret to Stonehenge has been found on Kim Kardashian's butt."
      • NYbagle 5 months ago
        Interesting comments you made and then...you mention those morons! LOL!
      • Max Reiner 5 months ago
        But not as sexy.
    • Michael S  •  5 months ago
      "...how the rocks made the long journey to Stonehenge sometime between 3000 and 1600 BC"

      It probably helped that the builders didn't waste all their time on Facebook.
      • walter w 5 months ago
        right...that was your job and you worked at it from sun up till sun down...and remember that in those times people either lived in the palace or were slaves or soldiers so there was no shortage of workers...
      • STEVEN H 5 months ago
        do you think the goverment (like our house and senate) were involved???
      • Consider This 5 months ago
        a complete lack of government regulations helped as well.
    • Robert  •  Louisville, United States  •  5 months ago
      If they moved them on the water, I bet they lost at least one along the way. Check the water route with sonar and see if you can find one. Find one and you have your answer.
      • L 5 months ago
        I don't know if that has already been tried or not, but it sounds like a viable way to check out one theory on how the stones were transported (assuming one or more sank).
      • Mitchell 5 months ago
        Do you know what Sonar is? It doesn't work like that, you would just pick up the bottom... coming from a Sonar Tech.
      • SpaceRanger 5 months ago
        Very good, wow, makes me wish I had said that.
    • Blazin  •  Deridder, United States  •  5 months ago
      The one thing that I have learned in my 37 years on this planet is don't underestimate the power of the human mind. All it takes is a great idea and a push to make it happen. Just because it was people from thousands of years ago doesn't mean there weren't great imaginations that got put to work. If people were supposed to be stupid back then, well I guess we would have never made it out of the caves.
      • John Galt 5 months ago
        We have a bad habit of thinking of those "primitive" people that existed before us as being, well, primitive". Humans today are just more technologically advanced, which has allowed us to ask more questions about the universe. It doesn't mean that people in the past were any less intelligent. Arguably, I'd say we're somewhat less informed. People today tend to focus on single subject issues, be is social, political, scientific, religious or economic. People in the past were more well rounded on all of these issues because they had to be. Where are the worlds new Renaissance men? This specialization in how we think and focus our lives is largely what has driven our technology jumps.
      • Laurel 5 months ago
        Correction, people today are more technologically dependent. It took a lot of technology to move those stones, among other feats of the time.
      • Land of the Greedy 5 months ago
        There's a lot more to it than that. Explain how they were able to move 400 ton stone slabs to highly elevated areas of the world, which could not support the workforce needed to accomplish that task. At one location the oxygen content was so high that plant life grew stunted, so how the heck did they eat, let alone move slabs of that size. No...something more went on back then, and that history has been deliberately erased. There are too many lost civilizations, and too few answers. That automatically tells me that those answers have been carefully hidden.
    • Freedom Tastes of Reality  •  Atlanta, United States  •  5 months ago
      Gobeckli Tepi in Turkey has their own Stonehedge, it is 5000 years older, the stones are polished and have reliefs of animals not indigenous to the area. It is brilliant and inexplicable.
    • everyone  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  5 months ago
      Wasn't it Archemides who said: "Give me a lever and fulcrum and I can move the world."? One of the greatest fallacies of history is that Mankind is getting smarter over time. All one has to do to prove this untrue is look at the aincient Wonders and then read the comments on Yahoo...
    • Tank  •  5 months ago
      Sun Worshipers? I lived in the UK for the first 25 years of my life, and I think I only saw the sun twice.
    • Not as old as I feel  •  Bryan, United States  •  5 months ago
      Creating the wonders of the world has and probably always will, require people to think out side the box.
    • anon  •  5 months ago
      This just in: People find rocks more interesting than the Kardashians!
    • Celador2  •  5 months ago
      The landscape was much different and the scientists today should use only conditions in 3000-1600 BC to make their analysis on who, when, where and what was involved in the stones transportation form one site to another..

      Egyptians also transported stones for pyramids and valued the structures enough to transport them.
    • Anamorphic1  •  5 months ago
      The present suffers by assuming the past was intelectually inferior.
    • Clown  •  5 months ago
      The people who built Stonehenge were smarter than these guys trying to figure it out?
    • Think it Through  •  5 months ago
      I grew up in a hunter gatherer lifestyle in rural Alaska. I can tell you that things seem impossible to modern man when they do not have the time or skills to do things by hand. My brother and I once moved a single log ninety feet long, 6 feet on the big end, 3-1/2 feet on the small end by hand 200 feet from where the tree blew down, to the ocean where it would float. Took us a solid week. My uncles built a road eight feet wide x three feet high and a quarter mile long with a shovel and a wheelbarrow. With a thousand men and a hundred years Stonehenge is entirely doable.
    • Shannon K  •  Eugene, United States  •  5 months ago
      Why do people always click to open an article, read the article, and then proceed to complain about how it isnt news. Maybe it is news to some people. Maybe I find it interesting which is why I clicked to open the article and then proceeded to read the article. Seriously some of you need to find a hobby. Yes a hobby. Something that isnt revolved in ignorance or, as so many articles are, hatred. Sad people I feel sorry for ya.
    • clint  •  5 months ago
      Many hands make light work.
    • Andrew  •  Austin, United States  •  5 months ago
      We continually underestimate the capabilities of ancient peoples, and their ability to solve problems, build things, and impose their will on their natural surroundings. So convinced are we in our modern world of our "technological superiority" that we cannot imagine that people who lived before we did had the same cognitive ability, the same capacity for problem solving, the same understanding of the physical world, the same ability to construct, to imagine, to create... what arrogant fools we are!!!
    • AARON  •  Fort Worth, United States  •  5 months ago
      I don't even like carrying the groceries from the car.
    • Peter  •  5 months ago
      Even the cut stones of the pyramids are pale in comparison to the "Great Platform" of Baalbek located in Lebanon. These giant stones weigh 1000 and 1200 tonnes apiece. They set so close together that a needle cannot be placed between them. Stonehenge, Gobeckli, and so many other locations only cause us to wonder how much knowledge has been lost over the course of mankind.

    Featured Blog Posts

    Blog Authors / Profiles