By Mike Parker Pearson and the Stonehenge Riverside Project. First published in Great Britain in 2012 as "Stonehenge: Exploring the Greatest Stone Age Mystery' by Simon & Schuster.
Stonehenge stands as an enduring link to our prehistoric ancestors, yet the secrets it has guarded for thousands of years have long eluded us. Until now, the millions of enthusiasts who flock to the iconic site have made do with mere speculation - about Stonehenge's celestial significance, human sacrifice, and even aliens and druids. One would think that the numerous research expeditions at Stonehenge had left no stone unturned. Yet, before the Stonehenge Riverside Project - a hugely ambitious, seven-year dig by today's top archaeologists - all previous digs combined had only investigated a fraction of the monument, and many records from those earlier expeditions are either inaccurate or incomplete.
'Stonehenge: A New Understanding' rewrites the story. From 2003 to 2009, author Mike Parker Pearson led the Stonehenge Riverside Project, the most comprehensive excavation ever conducted around Stonehenge. The project unearthed a wealth of fresh evidence that had gone untouched since prehistory. Parker Pearson uses that evidence to present a paradigm-shifting theory of the true significance that Stonehenge held for its builders - and mines his field notes to give you a you-are-there view of the dirt, drama, and thrilling discoveries of this history-changing archaeological dig.
Author(s): Mike Parker Pearson
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: The Experiment
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 410
City: New York
Map
Introduction
1. The Man from Madagascar
2. A Brief History of Stonehenge
3. Starting the Project
4. Putting the Trench in the Right Place
5. The Houses and the Henge
6. Was This Where the Stonehenge Builders Lived?
7. The Great Trilithon and the Date of the Sarsens
8. Mysterious Earthworks: The Landscape of Stonehenge
9. Mysteries of the River
10. The Druids and Stonehenge
11. The Aubrey Holes
12. Digging at Stonehenge
13. The People of Stonehenge and the Beaker People
14. Bluestonehenge: Back to the River
15. Why Stonehenge Is Where it Is
16. Origins of the Bluestones
17. Origins of the Sarsens
18. Earthworms and Dates
19. The New Sequence for Stonehenge
20. Stonehenge: The View from Afar
21. The End of Stonehenge
PLATES
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Illustrations
Index
About the Author