How a New Study on Cattle Traction Reshapes a Speculative Hypothesis
A cow that walked from Wales to Salisbury Plain five thousand years ago may have helped drag the bluestones to Stonehenge. Or she may simply have been a milk cow who calved at the wrong moment. A landmark 2026 study has just made the second interpretation more likely — but it has also, almost accidentally, handed us the tools to settle the question.
The hypothesis rests on a single tooth. Excavated from Stonehenge's ditch and dated to around 3350–2920 BC, the third molar belonged to a young female Bos taurus whose strontium isotopes trace a journey from the Preseli Hills in Wales to the chalk downlands of Wessex — exactly the route taken by the famous bluestones. Sequential sampling of the enamel revealed a sharp spike in lead (Pb) during the final months of the cow's life. The original researchers attributed this to the metabolic upheaval of calving or lactation, which mobilises lead stored in bone. But an alternative reading is possible: the spike could record fracture healing or intense physical stress caused by harness-related injury during heavy draught work. If so, this animal wasn't just walking the bluestone route — she was working it.
For that idea to hold, Neolithic farmers would have needed to yoke cattle — probably cows rather than specialised oxen — and use them for heavy labour at a time when organised draught technology is otherwise invisible in Britain. This is where the new evidence arrives.
What Liu and Albarella Found
In the most systematic osteological investigation of British cattle traction yet published, Phoebe Liu and Umberto Albarella examined metapodials and phalanges from 22 archaeological sites spanning the Neolithic to the post-Medieval period. Fourteen of these were core pre-Iron Age sites; eight were later comparators from the Iron Age, Roman, and Medieval periods that provide positive controls for known traction use. The authors applied two independent methods: a modified Pathological Index (mPI) that detects bone stress, and biometric shape ratios — particularly the Bd/GLpe ratio in first phalanges — that distinguish draught from non-draught animals.
The results are clear. Across Early, Middle, and Late Neolithic assemblages — including sites contemporary with bluestone transport such as Durrington Walls and the Orcadian settlements of Skara Brae and Links of Noltland — pathological changes are minimal and bone shapes match modern non-working cattle. Even where mature animals are well represented, as at Runnymede (60% adult/elderly) and Durrington Walls (58%), mPI values remain low. Only in the Middle to Late Bronze Age (1600–700 BC) do both methods converge on clear evidence of regular draught use, most prominently at Clay Farm and Potterne. The authors conclude that animal traction, at least at an intensity sufficient to leave skeletal traces, arrived in Britain centuries after the bluestones.
Importantly, the paper also challenges one of the key supporting references for Neolithic traction in the British Isles. The 2023 Kilshane study, which proposed draught oxen in Ireland from around 3600 BC, used comparative Pathological Index values drawn from second rather than first phalanges — making the comparison unreliable. This weakens what had been one of the stronger pieces of circumstantial evidence for early cattle traction in the region.
What This Means for the Hypothesis
Does this kill the idea of Neolithic cattle hauling bluestones? Not quite — and thinking in Bayesian terms helps explain why.
We begin with a prior probability that should be described honestly: moderately low, but not negligible. It rests on the cow's Welsh provenance matching the bluestone source, the ritual deposition of her jaw at Stonehenge, the lead spike in her enamel, and continental evidence that cattle were occasionally used for light traction elsewhere in Neolithic Europe. None of this is proof, but it amounts to more than idle speculation.
The likelihood of finding clear osteological evidence, however, was always going to be low if the work was rare, short-lived, and performed by unspecialised animals. Picture the scenario concretely: not a standing workforce of trained oxen ploughing fields season after season, but a small number of cows yoked for days or weeks during an exceptional communal project — hauling stones over a journey of roughly 250 kilometres, with frequent rest stops, across terrain that would have demanded intermittent rather than continuous effort. Neolithic farming in southern Britain was small-scale and intensive; cows were primarily valued for milk, and the energetic cost of maintaining working animals would have been tolerated only for extraordinary purposes. In such a scenario, we would expect little or no detectable skeletal damage at the population level — exactly what Liu and Albarella found. Their method is calibrated against modern draught oxen performing sustained, heavy work; as they themselves note, it is mainly designed to identify draught oxen, and an earlier use of cows for traction cannot be excluded.
The posterior probability therefore shifts downward, but not to zero. The absence of evidence is genuinely informative: it makes routine, organised cattle haulage of multi-tonne stones less plausible than we might once have thought. But it is not decisive evidence of absence. Light, opportunistic use of a few animals over a short period could have occurred without leaving the kind of widespread bone remodelling that survives in the archaeological record five millennia later.
Liu and Albarella's broader archaeological narrative actually reinforces one dimension of the hypothesis by a different route. They argue persuasively that the Late Neolithic in southern Britain was predominantly pastoral, with arable farming in decline — meaning there was no agricultural motivation for routine traction. But that is precisely the point: the bluestone transport hypothesis doesn't require routine traction. It requires an exceptional effort for an exceptional project. The paper is about farming economies and regular draught use; Stonehenge was neither regular nor ordinary.
A Way to Test It
This is where the story becomes more interesting than a simple verdict of "weakened but not refuted." The Liu and Albarella study doesn't just update our beliefs — it equips us with the material and methods to test the hypothesis more rigorously than ever before.
Their project includes mandibular teeth from the Neolithic and Bronze Age cattle they analysed, still curated in museums across Britain. Applying the identical sequential enamel micro-sampling technique used on the Stonehenge cow tooth — the method developed by Evans et al. (2025) — would allow a direct comparison of lead profiles across three groups:
Neolithic teeth with no traction signatures would establish the baseline. If Pb spikes appear in these animals, they are most likely linked to reproduction, seasonal nutritional stress, or other non-labour causes. This tells us what "normal" looks like for a Neolithic cow that wasn't hauling stones.
Bronze Age teeth with confirmed traction stress — from sites like Potterne and Clay Farm, where both pathological and biometric evidence converge on draught use — would serve as positive controls. If labour-induced bone mobilisation produces a distinctive Pb signature, it should show up here.
The Stonehenge tooth can then be compared against both groups. If its Pb spike is indistinguishable from the Neolithic baseline, the haulage interpretation loses ground. If it is anomalous — sharper, differently patterned, or more consistent with the Bronze Age draught profile — the hypothesis gains credible, testable support.
The raw data from the Liu and Albarella study are publicly available on Mendeley, and the relevant teeth are already in museum collections. This is not a speculative call for some future technological breakthrough; it is a logistically feasible, relatively low-cost follow-up that could be undertaken with existing methods and existing material. It would also address a broader archaeological question that the paper itself raises: when exactly did Britain adopt animal traction, and what does the transition look like at the level of individual animal biographies rather than population-level bone morphology?
The Sharper Question
The Liu and Albarella paper does two valuable things at once. It injects a necessary note of caution into romantic narratives of Neolithic oxen dragging bluestones across Wales, reminding us that the osteological evidence for organised traction in Britain begins later than the hypothesis requires. Yet it simultaneously provides the comparative framework — the dated, curated, analysed teeth from known traction and non-traction populations — that could transform the debate from speculation into data.
That cow walked from the Preseli Hills to Salisbury Plain around five thousand years ago. Her jawbone was placed in Stonehenge's ditch, and her tooth is still in a museum. The dataset she needs to be compared against now exists. The question is sharper than it has ever been. It just needs the right experiment.
References:
https://www.sarsen.org/2026/02/a-speculative-hypothesis-neolithic.html
Liu, P., Albarella, U. The origins of animal traction in Britain: implications for technological and social developments in the Bronze Age. Archaeol Anthropol Sci 18, 83 (2026). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-026-02455-z

