Seahenge Was Built To Combat Harsh Climate, Finds Study

by Pelican Press
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Seahenge Was Built To Combat Harsh Climate, Finds Study

Seahenge timber enclosure with central inverted oak stump, thought to be used for rituals intended to influence the climate.

With all the focus on the iconic Stonehenge and its relation to the Sun and the Moon, England’s east coast Seahenge perhaps receives less historical attention than it deserves. A brilliant new study has shed light on this other prehistoric monument, re-investigating its purpose for being built over 4,000 years ago. The study has found that the monument was in place to conduct certain rituals aimed at prolonging the summer during the periods of extreme and bitter cold changes of the 3rd millennium BC. 

University of Aberdeen researcher Dr David Nance has published new findings in GeoJournal on Holme I (Seahenge) – a 4000-year-old Bronze Age wooden circle, revealed by the shifting sands of Holme-next-the-Sea beach on the north Norfolk coast in 1998. 





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Seahenge, norfolk, bronze age, rituals, Monuments, climate change
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