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Suburb of Stonehenge: ritual village found near famed rock site.


Excavations in southern England Southern England is an imprecise term used to refer to the southern counties of England. Differing usages apply the term with varying geographic extents.

In most definitions Southern England includes all the counties on the English Channel; from west to east these are:
     of a village dating to 4,600 years ago are transforming archaeologists' notions about the function of nearby Stonehenge, the legendary set of massive stones that people positioned on Salisbury Plain Salisbury Plain, undulating, mostly barren chalk plateau, c.300 sq mi (780 sq km), Wiltshire, S England. It is noted chiefly as the site of ancient monuments, of which Stonehenge is the most famous. The region is also an army training ground.  around the same time.

    Researchers led by Michael Parker Pearson of the University of Sheffield The University of Sheffield is a research university, located in Sheffield in South Yorkshire, England. Reputation
    Sheffield was the Sunday Times University of the Year in 2001 and has consistently appeared as their top 20 institutions.
     in England suspect that the same community built both the village and Stonehenge as parts of a religious complex devoted to the dead. "We think we're looking at a village that was occupied by the builders of Stonehenge," Parker Pearson says.

    After massive feasts in town, villagers transported bodies about 2 miles up the River Avon to Stonehenge, where some were interred after cremation cremation, disposal of a corpse by fire. It is an ancient and widespread practice, second only to burial. It has been found among the chiefdoms of the Pacific Northwest, among Northern Athapascan bands in Alaska, and among Canadian cultural groups. , according to Parker Pearson. The huge stones memorialized the villagers' deceased relatives, he asserts.

    Parker Pearson and Julian Thomas of the University of Manchester The University of Manchester is a university located in Manchester, England. With over 40,000 students studying 500 academic programmes, more than 10,000 staff and an annual income of nearly £600 million it is the largest single-site University in the United Kingdom and receives  in England described the new findings Jan. 30 during a teleconference held by one of their funding organizations, the National Geographic Society National Geographic Society

    U.S. scientific society founded in 1888 in Washington, D.C., by a small group of eminent explorers and scientists “for the increase and diffusion of geographic knowledge.
     in Washington, D.C.

    Many investigators have viewed Stonehenge as an isolated site used for religious or astronomical purposes.

    Parker Pearson's team focused on a location called Durrington Walls. There, other researchers had detected magnetic traces of dozens of hearths typical of dwellings. Durrington Walls is alarge henge henge
    Noun

    a circular monument, often containing a circle of stones, dating from the Neolithic and Bronze Ages [from Stonehenge]
    , an enclosure surrounded by an earthen earth·en  
    adj.
    1. Made of earth or clay: an earthen fortification; an earthen pot.

    2. Earthly; worldly.
     bank and ditch. That henge was last investigated in 1967.

    The new project began in 2003 and will run through 2010. Last September, Parker Pearson and his coworkers uncovered remains of eight houses at the site. Each house measured about 16 square feet and had a central fireplace set in a clay floor. Postholes and slots in the floors once anchored wooden furniture. Debris, including huge numbers of animal bones and cooking implements strewn strew  
    tr.v. strewed, strewn or strewed, strew·ing, strews
    1. To spread here and there; scatter: strewing flowers down the aisle.

    2.
     across the floors, represents the remains of ancient feasts, Parker Pearson says.

    Radiocarbon ra·di·o·car·bon  
    n.
    A radioactive isotope of carbon, especially carbon 14.


    radiocarbon
    Noun

    a radioactive isotope of carbon, esp.
     dates for the houses overlap with previous age estimates for cremated remains discovered at Stonehenge.

    The Durrington Walls houses bordered a stone road, 90 feet wide and 560 feet long, found in 2005 and further excavated last year. The road runs from the remains of a huge ceremonial circle of timbers to the river. Two miles upstream, a comparable road stretches from the river to Stonehenge.

    Thomas excavated two Durrington Walls structures on a terrace and surrounded by wooden fences and ditches within the henge. He suggests that these structures and at least three others nearby served either as shrines or as houses for community leaders.

    The pair of roads at Stonehenge and Durrington Walls illuminates the complementary relationship between the sites, Parker Pearson holds. For instance, Stonehenge's thoroughfare, discovered in the 18th century, aligns with the midsummer-solstice sunrise, while the Durrington Walls road lines up with the midsummer-solstice sunset. Similarly, a set of three giant stones at Stonehenge frames the midwinter-solstice sunset, while the Durrington Walls timber circle aligns with the midwinter-solstice sunrise.

    Parker Pearson says that villagers appear to have used Durrington Walls as a place for periodic celebrations of life--held before they moved their dead up the river to the afterlife via cremation at Stonehenge, a symbol of permanence.

    Archaeologist Caroline Malone of the University of Cambridge in England calls the new findings "extremely exciting." She notes that to confirm their theory, the researchers need to find more evidence of graves and funeral activities in the Durrington Walls vicinity.
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    Article Details
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    Title Annotation:This Week
    Author:Bower, B.
    Publication:Science News
    Date:Feb 3, 2007
    Words:553
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