Bronze-age burial site unearthed in UK
Archaeologists have unearthed human bones, beads and pottery under a prehistoric monument in the UK which they believe could be a bronze-age burial site.
The Trefael Stone in Pembrokeshire was thought to be just one of many linked to nearby Bronze Age sites. But it has now been reclassified after a survey by archaeologists from the University of Bristol found human bones along with beads and shards of pottery under the stone.
The team thinks the site, near Nevern, has been used for ritual burials for at least 5,500 years, the BBC reported.
The importance of the stone has been overlooked since it first appeared on maps in 1889. In 1972 archaeologist Frances Lynch suggested it could be a dolmen, or burial chamber.
University of Bristol visiting fellow Dr George Nash and colleagues held an excavation in September 2010 and returned again in 2011. As well as unearthing the human remains, beads and pottery, they found a stone cist — a half-metre long coffin-like container — which they estimate was put there in the later Bronze Age.
The find indicates the site may have been reused as a burial location long after the original stone chamber was built, the researchers said.
“I’ve always had this hunch that it could be much bigger. It’s extremely exciting. It’s one of those once-in-a-lifetime finds,” Dr Nash said.
The findings, he said, suggest that it be Wales’ earliest Neolithic ritual burial location and one of the earliest in Western Europe.
The stone is already noted for a number cupmarks or circular holes gouged out during its ritual use in the Neolithic and Bronze Age ceremonies.
The archaeologists found a further 30 cupmarks of varying size on the 1.2m high stone.
Dr Nash said they were able to establish the site was stone burial chamber, built from giant boulders, going back to around 3,500 BC, which was then dismantled about 2,000 BC.
Post new comment