The archaeological mystery of Stonehenge’s long-lost megaliths

Around 4,500 years ago, the famous silhouette of Stonehenge would have looked very different. Writer and archaeologist Mike Pitts digs up clues to the mystery of the circle’s long-lost stones.

If you are fortunate enough to be at Stonehenge on midwinter day, 21 December, and also for the sky to be clear near the horizon as the Sun sets you can experience a striking event. Position yourself between the tall, outlying Heel Stone and the stone circle, and look south-west through the megaliths. In the closing darkness they appear like a huge crumbling wall, orange light slanting through vertical fissures. In the last quick moments, the Sun disappears from a window formed by two great vertical stones and the horizontal lintel they support. It’s dark and cold. Stonehenge, it feels, has swallowed the Sun.

My archaeological colleagues and I are convinced that this alignment is no coincidence: it was designed by the monument’s builders. But were you able to see this annual drama 4,500 years ago, the spectacle would be yet more impressive. The solstice sightline was marked by as many as six futher upright pairs. Of the greatest of these – the tallest and the most finely carved stones on the site – now just a single megalith known as Stone 56 is left. A projecting bulge on the top of this stone once fitted into a giant lintel. Now that tenon rises exposed and useless.

And many more upright stones have gone. What happened to these missing stones? Who took them down and where did they go? How do we know they were once there? Can we picture what the completed Stonehenge looked like? Indeed, was it ever finished at all?

It was an entirely unexpected find for a young archaeologist – made on the verge of the road as people were gathering for the then infamous Stonehenge pop festival – that has affected how I think about the site ever since

  • Related Posts

    Why you probably aren’t washing your towels often enough

    The towels we dry ourselves with get a lot of use and pick up a lot of microbes along the way. But how long should you wait before throwing them…

    Norway on track to be first to go all-electric

    Norway is the world leader when it comes to the take up of electric cars, which last year accounted for nine out of 10 new vehicles sold in the country.…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Red Sea dive-boat survivors accuse authorities of cover up

    • By admin
    • January 15, 2025
    • 28 views
    Red Sea dive-boat survivors accuse authorities of cover up

    Obesity needs new definition, says global report

    • By admin
    • January 15, 2025
    • 30 views
    Obesity needs new definition, says global report

    Is this the end of Berlin’s famous club scene?

    • By admin
    • January 14, 2025
    • 16 views
    Is this the end of Berlin’s famous club scene?

    Trapped in the dark for 35 hours – Red Sea dive-boat survivors tell of terrifying escapes

    • By admin
    • January 14, 2025
    • 12 views
    Trapped in the dark for 35 hours – Red Sea dive-boat survivors tell of terrifying escapes

    LA brain surgeon saves street from ‘apocalyptic’ wildfires

    • By admin
    • January 14, 2025
    • 12 views
    LA brain surgeon saves street from ‘apocalyptic’ wildfires

    Spain plans 100% tax for homes bought by non-EU residents

    • By admin
    • January 14, 2025
    • 12 views
    Spain plans 100% tax for homes bought by non-EU residents