
Stonehenge cremations shed light on where mysterious monument builders came from
Five thousand years ago, the people of Stonehenge buried cremated bodies under the ancient and mysterious site, near Amesbury, U.K.
Archaeologists have long believed that the remains belonged to individuals connected with the monument, but for more than a century, they’ve been unable to figure out where they came from or why they were buried there. Now, a new analysis of these remains is providing some answers.
Science Magazine
August 2, 2018
© Qalinx CC BY 2.0
“This is an extremely important study,” says Martin Smith, a biological anthropologist at Bournemouth University in Poole, U.K., who was not involved in the research.
The burials of 58 individuals were uncovered in 1919. The cremated bones had been interred in now vanished organic containers, perhaps leather bags, in round pits near the monument. Intriguingly, these pits may once have held standing stones, as well as the human remains.
Related articles
The Art Newspaper
- Exploding volcano mural could be world's oldest landscape (January 2014)
Science Magazine
- Human blood, organs and a surprising virus detected in ancient pottery (December 2016)
- Stone-age Italians defleshed their dead (March 2015)
Timeless Travels Magazine
- Ancient Orkney, Centre of the Neolithic World (Spring 2017)
- Malta: Island of Giants (Autumn 2015)