'Astonishing' giant circle of pits found near Stonehenge, World News

'Astonishing' giant circle of pits found near Stonehenge, World News

Neolithic Hidden by the Stonehenge Spotlight

A Giant Puzzle Piece Unveiled

Archaeologists have just cracked a long‑standing riddle about the ancient stone ring: a sprawling ring of deep pits has been found lacing an old settlement near Stonehenge. Think of it as a cosmic chalk‑board drawn by Neolithic architects, but on a scale that makes a modern GPS look tiny.

Why It Matters

  • These pits form a 2‑km (1.2‑mile) wide circle around Durrington Walls—home to the people who built Stonehenge.
  • Each pit is roughly 5 metres deep and 10 metres across, making them the largest in Britain.
  • The site sits about 3.2 km northeast of Stonehenge, evidence tying the pits to the same 4,500‑year‑old era.
  • Scientists say the precise layout hints at a sophisticated tally system used by ancient Briton to track distance.

Remote‑Sensing, No Digging, Pure Genius

Thanks to cutting‑edge remote sensing, the team mapped the circles without a single shovel turning the ground. It’s as if we had seen the ghost of a huge labyrinth, and the phases were no longer hidden under soil but visible from the skies.

What the Pits Reveal

  1. They suggest the Neolithic folks were not just building stones—they were documenting cosmological beliefs in stone.
  2. With probably 30+ pits originally, these weren’t just random holes; it was a carefully planned structure.
  3. “They were measuring the world, building a map of ideas, and handing it to you—only with a little less GPS glitch.”

Experts On Dialogue

Nicholas Snashall from the National Trust: “Durrington Walls is the kitchen where Stonehenge’s chefs cooked, and these pits are their recipe cards.”

Professor Vince Gaffney of Bradford University: “The barren measure is unpreceded in the UK. These layers of thought show a record system that’s as awe‑inspiring as the stones themselves.”

Bottom Line

Imagine a 2‑kilometre ring of colossal pits that were used to map the cosmos—a pre‑industrial “holistic GPS.” This discovery not only solves a piece of the Stonehenge puzzle but also offers a fresh lens on how the first people understood the world around them.