Tuesday, 25 March 2025

Preservation of Archaeology under Tracks - Findings and Recommendations.

Findings on Preservation Under Tracks at Barrow Clump


 The excavations at Barrow Clump, conducted under Operation Nightingale and led by Richard Osgood, provided significant insights into how military vehicle tracks can influence the preservation of archaeological remains. The site, a Bronze Age barrow reused as an Anglo-Saxon cemetery, is located on Salisbury Plain, an area heavily used for military training. The 2018 excavation season, dubbed "Exercise Beowulf," specifically highlighted the condition of remains beneath these tracks. Key findings include:

 

1. **Unexpected Preservation**: Despite the pressure from military vehicles (e.g., tanks and farm machinery), archaeological remains under the tracks were remarkably well-preserved. For instance, a female skeleton was uncovered directly beneath a vehicle track, accompanied by two small-long brooches, beads, and a knife, all intact. Similarly, a male warrior burial was found with a shield boss, spearhead, and sword, also under a track, showing minimal disturbance to the skeletal remains and artifacts.

 

2. **Compaction as a Protective Mechanism**: The weight of vehicles appeared to compact the soil above the burials, creating a hardened layer that shielded the remains from deeper degradation. This compaction limited the penetration of water, oxygen, and biological activity (e.g., plant roots or burrowing animals like badgers), which are common causes of decay in archaeological contexts. Badger setts, a significant threat at Barrow Clump, were less active directly under the tracks, further aiding preservation.

 

3. **Localized Damage**: While preservation was generally good, some superficial damage was noted. The pressure from vehicles occasionally caused minor crushing or displacement of artifacts and bones near the surface. However, this was not extensive enough to destroy the integrity of the burials, which remained identifiable and rich in contextual information.

 

4. **Contrast with Untracked Areas**: In areas not subjected to vehicle traffic, badger activity and natural erosion had caused more significant disturbance. The tracked zones, by contrast, acted as a stabilizing cap, protecting deeper deposits from these threats.

 

These findings were detailed in the 2018 Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO) and Wessex Archaeology monograph, as well as in Richard Osgood’s *Broken Pots, Mending Lives* (2023), which notes the "surprisingly good preservation" under tracks as a counterintuitive outcome of military activity.

 

### Extrapolation and Recommendations for Managing Similar Tracks

 

Based on the Barrow Clump evidence, the preservation of archaeological remains under vehicle tracks suggests a complex interplay between human activity and site conservation. This can inform management strategies for similar contexts—military training grounds, agricultural lands, or other areas with vehicle traffic overlaying potential archaeological sites. Here’s a recommendation framework:

 

1. **Assessment and Mapping**:

   - **Action**: Conduct geophysical surveys (e.g., ground-penetrating radar or magnetometry) and targeted test excavations to identify archaeological remains beneath existing tracks.

   - **Rationale**: The Barrow Clump findings indicate that tracks may unknowingly cap significant sites. Mapping these areas prevents inadvertent destruction during unrelated land use changes and identifies zones warranting protection.

 

2. **Maintain Controlled Traffic**:

   - **Action**: Where tracks already exist over archaeological deposits, maintain current vehicle use patterns rather than abandoning or rerouting them, provided the traffic remains consistent and does not intensify.

   - **Rationale**: The compaction effect at Barrow Clump suggests that stable, ongoing pressure can preserve remains by limiting environmental exposure. Sudden cessation of traffic might destabilize this balance, exposing sites to erosion or bioturbation (e.g., badgers), while increased traffic could risk deeper damage.

 

3. **Monitor Load and Frequency**:

   - **Action**: Regulate the weight and frequency of vehicles using the tracks, avoiding heavy machinery beyond what the soil and remains can withstand.

   - **Rationale**: While Barrow Clump showed resilience under military vehicles, excessive loads could fracture bones or artifacts, as seen in minor surface damage. Establishing load thresholds (e.g., based on soil type and burial depth) ensures preservation without compromising site integrity.

 

4. **Protective Layering**:

   - **Action**: In areas with known but unexcavated remains under tracks, consider adding a controlled layer of soil or gravel before resuming traffic, if feasible.

   - **Rationale**: Enhancing the compacted layer could mimic Barrow Clump’s protective cap, distributing vehicle weight more evenly and reducing localized pressure points, especially for shallow deposits.

 

5. **Mitigation for New Tracks**:

   - **Action**: For proposed tracks in archaeologically sensitive areas, undertake pre-construction excavations or reroute to avoid direct impact. If avoidance isn’t possible, install a geotextile barrier beneath the track to cushion remains.

   - **Rationale**: Barrow Clump’s preservation was a fortunate outcome, not a predictable one. Proactive measures can replicate this effect intentionally, preventing damage during initial track establishment when remains are most vulnerable.

 

6. **Long-Term Monitoring**:

   - **Action**: Periodically reassess tracked areas using non-invasive methods (e.g., drone surveys for surface changes or soil sampling for degradation markers) and intervene if preservation conditions deteriorate.

   - **Rationale**: Environmental shifts (e.g., climate change altering soil moisture) or increased bioturbation could undermine the protective effect over time, necessitating adaptive management.

 

### Practical Example

For tracks in the Stonehenge and Avebury WHS the Council could designate "archaeological track zones" where vehicle use continues under strict guidelines (e.g., light vehicles only, regular maintenance to prevent ruts and no subsoil disturbance). If expansion or change is needed, preemptive excavation or protective layering could safeguard unstudied remains, balancing operational needs with heritage conservation.

 

This approach leverages the Barrow Clump anomaly—where human activity inadvertently preserved history—as a model for intentional stewardship, turning a potential threat into a tool for protection and should be applied to the Byways in the WHS.

Sunday, 23 March 2025

The Gentrification of Stonehenge: A Monument Stripped of Its Soul

 (An alternative view I have lightly edited, to sanitise it. Published to provoke thought rather than to endorse it)  

Stonehenge has long been a symbol of mystery, power, and timelessness. For centuries, it was a place where the rhythms of human life—high and low—intersected with the land. The upper classes once roamed its windswept expanse, their horses pounding the earth in pursuit of quarry, engaged in the aristocratic pastimes of hunting, shooting and racing. The lower classes, meanwhile, were no strangers to its shadows, tending flocks as shepherds or poaching his Lordship’s game in a gritty, unglamorous symbiosis with the elite. And more recently there were the great unwashed—those raucous, unruly souls who gathered at the stones for festivals, their revelry a raw, earthy counterpoint to the refined pursuits of their betters. Even the forces of Law were still Reganesque, as in Jack of The Sweeney rather Ronnie.  Stonehenge was a crossroads, a place where the baser ends of the spectrum of humanity collided in all their messy, vibrant glory.

 

But that Stonehenge is gone. What stands today is a sanitized relic, a victim of the creeping, prissy gentrification that has claimed so much of Britain’s wild heritage. The monument, once a living stage for the dramas of class and culture, has been tidied up and repackaged as a playground for the middle classes—a cohort whose sensibilities have smothered its spirit under a blanket of self-conscious decorum. Where once the air rang with the cries of hounds and the laughter of festival-goers, now it hums with the polite chatter of tourists and the rustle of Gore-Tex jackets.  Stonehenge, a site that once bore witness to the raw pulse of life, has been reduced to a backdrop for Instagram posts and heritage gift shopping.

 

This transformation is not merely a matter of changing demographics; it’s a profound loss of ambience. The upper classes, with their blood sports and aristocratic swagger, brought a kind of brutal elegance to the place—a connection to the land that was visceral, if elitist. The shepherds and hunt followers, meanwhile, grounded it in the toil and tenacity of working life, their presence a reminder of the gritty interdependence between man and nature. Even the festival-going rabble, with their chaotic energy, infused Stonehenge with a primal vitality that echoed its ancient, unknowable origins. Together, these groups—disparate as they were—wove a tapestry of human experience that felt authentic to the stones’ enigmatic presence.

 

Contrast that with today’s visitors. The middle-class takeover has imposed a sterile orderliness on Stonehenge, stripping away its wildness and replacing it with a curated, consumer-friendly experience. At the solstices the few, the precious few, authentic druids and survivors of the festivals are outnumbered by the Boden tribes and Trustafarians draped in faux-druidic robes, performing their earnest, awkward rituals with all the authenticity of a corporate team-building exercise.

 The tourists, meanwhile, arrive in droves, shepherded by audio guides and cordoned off from the stones themselves, their engagement limited to snapping photos and ticking a box on their cultural to-do lists. The site has become a commodity, its edges softened, and its mysteries shrink-wrapped for mass consumption.

 

This gentrification mirrors broader trends in modern Britain, where the rough edges of history and tradition are sanded down to suit a middle-class aesthetic. Stonehenge is no longer a place of spontaneity or struggle; it’s a heritage site, a sanitized monument preserved not for its living legacy but for its marketability. The upper classes have retreated to their estates, the working classes have been priced out or pushed aside, and the great unwashed have been replaced by a polite, paying public. What’s left is a hollowed-out shell—a Stonehenge that looks the part but feels like a theme park.

 

To mourn this change is not to romanticize the past uncritically. The old ways were not idyllic; they were unequal, often harsh, and steeped in their own contradictions. But they were real. They carried the weight of human experience—its triumphs, its cruelties, its joys—in a way that today’s manicured version does not. Stonehenge once stood as a testament to the untamed complexity of life; now it’s a stage for performative reverence and shallow tourism. The prissy gentrification of the middle classes has not elevated it—it has diminished it, turning a place of raw power into a polite curiosity. And in doing so, it has spoiled something irreplaceable.

 

The Setting Study and the Silo

The WHS setting study (details in posts below) is an interesting document, but my confidence in it is shaken as an obvious error jumped out at me as I thumbed through it.


The Stonehenge Silo is described as a Grain Elevator, it is nothing of the sort. It is a rare and important structure of a type described in Historic England's https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/publications/national-farm-building-types/ under silage clamp and tower.

Its preservation is essential as part of the history of the site and that the report writer failed to identify it correctly is very worrying.

More at https://www.sarsen.org/2016/06/the-stonehenge-silo.html

Draft Setting Study for the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site

Wiltshire Council has produced a draft Setting Study for the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site (WHS) which, once adopted, will be used to ensure that developments in Wiltshire do not adversely impact the internationally significant monuments within the WHS and their setting.    

The draft WHS Setting Study is proposed for adoption as a Supplementary Planning Document (SPD). If adopted as an SPD, it will become a material consideration in the determination of planning applications.   Adopting the Setting Study as an SPD will help support Core Policy 59 The Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Site and its Setting.  

The preparation of this SPD is following a prescribed process set out in legislation. It is proposed that the draft Setting Study (Appendix 1) is published for consultation for a 6-week period from 5th May 2025.    

Due process will follow the close of the consultation with consideration of the responses received. The council’s consideration, alongside any changes made, will be set out together with the final version of the proposed SPD for consideration by Cabinet 7th October. If supported, Cabinet will make a recommendation to Council for adoption as SPD 21st October 2025.   

The draft document in Appendix 1, has been prepared by Chris Blandford Associates working to a brief prepared by the Council. An internal working group including representative from planning, has been involved it its development. It has also been through an informal consultation process with external WHS partners including Historic England, the National Trust, Historic England and Defence Estates.   

Environment Select Committee Chairs have considered the draft document in a briefing and will get a further opportunity to review it in light of the public consultation at a meeting in September.

More Details: https://cms.wiltshire.gov.uk/ieDecisionDetails.aspx?Id=2123

A Forward-Looking Update: Stonehenge and Avebury WHS Research Framework, 2025–2045

 A Forward-Looking Update: Stonehenge and Avebury WHS Research Framework, 2025–2045

Introduction

The Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site (WHS) remains one of the most intensively studied prehistoric landscapes globally. As of March 2025, the research framework emphasized integrating multidisciplinary approaches—archaeology, geochemistry, genetics, and digital modeling—to unravel the sites’ construction, cultural significance, and broader Neolithic context. Looking ahead to 2045, this update envisions how emerging technologies, climate change impacts, and shifting scholarly priorities might shape the next two decades of investigation.

Key Research Themes (2025–2045)

  1. Advanced Geospatial and Subsurface Mapping
    • 2025 Context: Ground-penetrating radar and LiDAR have already revealed hidden features like the Durrington Walls “superhenge.”
    • 2045 Projection: By 2045, quantum sensing and AI-driven subsurface imaging could map the entire WHS at unprecedented resolution, identifying unexcavated structures without disturbing the soil. Expect discoveries of smaller satellite sites linking Stonehenge and Avebury, potentially redefining their ritual landscape as a sprawling interconnected network.
  2. Origins and Movement of Materials
    • 2025 Context: Recent studies (e.g., Parker Pearson et al., 2025) pinpointed the Altar Stone’s Scottish mainland origin, highlighting long-distance stone transport.
    • 2045 Projection: Isotopic and mineralogical analyses, enhanced by portable spectrometry, might trace every sarsen and bluestone to their exact quarries. Combined with virtual reality simulations of Neolithic transport methods (e.g., rafting, sledges), we could confirm whether human ingenuity or natural processes (glacial erratics debate resolved?) drove these feats. Expect a consensus by 2040 that Stonehenge’s stones symbolize a unified British Isles identity.
  3. Climate and Environmental Dynamics
    • 2025 Context: Paleoenvironmental data suggest a wetter, forested landscape during the Neolithic.
    • 2045 Projection: As climate change accelerates, research will prioritize how rising temperatures and rainfall affect preservation—e.g., sarsen erosion or waterlogging of buried organics. By 2045, bioarchaeological advances (pollen DNA sequencing) could reconstruct seasonal habitation patterns, showing how environmental shifts influenced monument construction timelines.
  4. Genomics and Population Studies
    • 2025 Context: Ancient DNA reveals migrations, like Neolithic farmers from Anatolia, shaping WHS communities.
    • 2045 Projection: Full-genome sequencing of cremated remains (aided by CRISPR-like preservation techniques) might identify familial ties among Stonehenge’s buried individuals, revealing whether it was a dynastic or communal site. Expect debates on social stratification to intensify, with evidence of elite lineages by 2045.
  5. Digital and Public Archaeology
    • 2025 Context: Interactive maps and 3D models democratize access to research.
    • 2045 Projection: Augmented reality (AR) headsets could let visitors “walk” a fully reconstructed Neolithic Stonehenge in real-time, while AI chatbots (successors to me, perhaps?) narrate findings. Public co-creation of research questions via global platforms might shift focus to understudied areas like Avebury’s West Kennet enclosures.
Challenges and Opportunities

  • Preservation vs. Exploration: By 2045, non-invasive methods will dominate due to stricter heritage laws, but funding battles between conservation and research could stall progress.
  • Interdisciplinary Synergy: Collaborations between archaeologists, climate scientists, and AI specialists will peak, though integrating datasets across decades might lag without standardized protocols.
  • Global Context: Comparing Stonehenge and Avebury to newly discovered megalithic sites (e.g., in Africa or Asia) could reposition them within a worldwide Neolithic narrative.
Conclusion

The next twenty years promise a golden age for Stonehenge and Avebury research, driven by technological leaps and a holistic approach to the past. By 2045, we might see these sites not just as isolated wonders but as nodes in a vast prehistoric web, their secrets unlocked through a blend of human curiosity and machine precision. The challenge will be balancing discovery with stewardship, ensuring these monuments endure for another millennium.

Written by Grok 3 Beta