Ancient Village Unearthed Near Stonehenge
cityhunter007 writes to point out coverage on CNN.com about an ancient village discovered two miles from Stonehenge that may have housed workers building the monument, or perhaps visitors after it was constructed. The village, at a site known as Durrington Walls, dates from about the time Stonehenge was built, 2600 BCE. The article says: "The researchers speculated that Durrington Walls was a place for the living and Stonehenge — where cremated remains have been found — was a cemetery and memorial... Stonehenge was oriented to face the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset, while the wooden circle at Durrington Walls faced the midwinter sunrise and midsummer sunset."
Nobody knows who they were
Or what they were doing...
(But they did have the sense to make Stonehenge a bit taller than 18".)
That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
The article calls Durrington Walls a "place for the living"? The houses appear to have been abandoned while still intact, given the artefacts found within them.
Silly question: where did everyone go?
I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
Nothing to do with Stonehenge per se, just an anecdote. We have a neolithic stone, known as the Long Stone, a ten minute walk down the road from where I'm writing this, which is on the edge of the Wye Valley , right up against the Welsh border. It's a single stone, sticking up at an angle of about 75 degrees, perhaps seven feet tall. A few years ago I had to walk from my village to the nearest town to sign on the dole - a tedious 40 minute slog along unmaintained road verges - but passing the stone, I always felt compelled to reach out and give it a pat. I'm a hardcore, Dawkins-type rationalist, but I don't see any contradiction between that and a consciously irrational but of behaviour like patting the stone... it fits my brain, somehow, and it feels good to be connected with the people who lived here four thousand years ago. Poor bastards, it must have been miserable during the winter nights.
Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
Before Stonehenge, there was Woodhenge and Strawhenge, but a big bad wolf came and blew them down, and three little piggies were relocated to the projects.
2 miles of walking is about half an hour each way. So the Stonehenge workers spent a hour-a-day getting to and from work.
Some things never change.
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
BCE WTF?? At least Y2K is both culturally OK and well understood. I vote for BY2K.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
The SPLA: Stonehenge Project Licensing Authority official gift shoppe.
"My parents visited Stonehenge and all I got was this lousy cloak"
KFG
The OP didn't say Domini wasn't Latin for "Lord", he said: Domini is the root for dominate Which is entirely separate from what you're saying, and correct, to boot.