

We are back in our usual lives, but
Durrington Walls
and Salisbury
are treasured memories.
ES, NC, USA
We're home, and
I've even managed
5 hours of sleep
but I couldn't let
any time go by without thanking
you for such an interesting tour all
of it but especially Durrington Walls.
Our conversation
at every turn kept coming back to
what we saw and were told about it.
CS, Texas,USA
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| Some of
the most exciting finds from the Neolithic period in
recent years have been discovered at Durrington Walls, nearly 2
miles north-east of Stonehenge.
Since 2003 a team led
by Professor Mike Parker Pearson of Sheffield
University has carried out an archaeological dig for
four weeks each year in the area and made some
ground breaking finds. Under the banner of the
Stonehenge Riverside Project, it is a research dig
involving five universities with sponsorship from
National Geographic and support from English
Heritage and the National Trust. Up to 120
archaeology students along with some of the leading
archaeologists of the Neolithic period in the world
work on site for the 4 weeks each year. |
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What is Durrington
Walls?
It is Britain's (and
therefore the worlds!) largest henge measuring nearly 500
metres in diameter. Not quite circular, it originally had
four entrances of which only one is now clearly visible. The
internal ditch was about 5 metres deep and in excess of 10
metres wide. The material dug out of the ditch was used to
create an external bank some 3 metres high. It was built
around 2500 BC and probably in one season making it an even
more remarkable feat. From the finds that have been made in
the last few years it may be that Durrington Walls is where
the builders of Stonehenge lived.
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What has been found?
The first dig took place
in 1967 when a new road was being built which now,
sadly, bisects the henge. A timber circle, known
as the Southern Circle, 40 metres in diameter
consisting of 6 concentric rings of posts was found.
More recent work has discovered that the entrance to
the circle is aligned on midwinter sunrise ie the
complete opposite of Stonehenge.
Most of
the timber circle at Durrington Walls is buried
beneath the road, but part of it was excavated in
2006. As we can see above some of the posts were
massive and timber of that size did not exist in the
area at the time it was erected around 2600 BC or
earlier.
A much
smaller timber 'circle' was also found, but this is
now buried beneath the road. Similar features have
been found to the south of Woodhenge nearby. |

Post hole of timber
circle
|
Leading down to the Rriver Avon next to Durrington Walls is an Avenue made up of a
double layer of compacted flint. It runs from the entrance
to the Southern Circle for a distance of over 100 metres. It
is the oldest metalled surface in Europe and when part of it
was uncovered in 2005 it glistened in the early morning dew.
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In 2005 the first
complete Neolithic house floors in England were
discovered by the Stonehenge Riverside Project at
Durrington Walls during the dig. These have been
excavated during the last 2 years, but 2007 may well
be the last year they were exposed. Measuring just
5mx5m they have a very similar floor plan to houses
built in stone found on the Orkneys. The Durrington
Walls houses are of timber and plaster and heavily
ploughed away. It is estimated that hundreds or perhaps a thousand or more of these little houses ran along
the valley side.
In amongst the
settlement was a midden. This contained some cattle
and sheep bones, pottery, arrowheads, and large
amounts of young pig bone. The way the pigs were
raised and killed leads archaeologists to believe
that they were consumed as part of feasting that
took place on the site. Studying the artefacts found
in the midden will allow the Stonehenge Riverside
Project to build up a clearer picture of life in the
Neolithic and increase our understanding of
Stonehenge's role within the wider landscape. |

House floor at
Durrington Walls
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Theories about the
role of Durrington Walls.
One of the great mysteries
from all of the archaeological digs that have taken place
in the immediate area around Stonehenge is the lack of
evidence of day-to-day activities. It is as if Stonehenge was
erected in isolation of a community. Building a wonderful
monument such as Stonehenge must have taken large numbers of
people who would have been in need of shelter and food
during their mammoth task.
The Stonehenge Riverside
Project lead archaeologist, Professor Mike Parker Pearson,believes that Durrington Walls is the land of the living
(and recently departed), while the area around Stonehenge is
the land of the ancestors. They are linked by Avenues from
both monuments which in turn are linked by the River Avon which
flows between their two ends.
What can be seen in
the area now?
Sadly the trenches are filled
at the end of each seasons dig. We can, however, still see
the remains of the ditch and bank of the henge, and
Woodhenge which is next to Durrington Walls. Having worked
on the dig for the last 2 years providing tour guiding
services to the thousands of people who visit each year our
tour guide can show you;
- the extent of Durrington
Walls,
- explain how it was built
- where the Southern
Circle was along with its Avenue
- where the Neolithic
houses and midden were found
- explain the other
archaeological finds in the area
- explain the Stonehenge
Riverside Project's theory on Durrington Walls and its
role in the wider landscape.
We can include a visit to
Woodhenge, the Cursus, the Avenue and, of course,
Stonehenge to paint you a full
and vivid picture of this historic and beautiful landscape.
Please do
contact us for further details
about your visit.
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