Weeks after revelation that megalith came from Scotland, researchers make surprise discovery
"The plot has thickened on the mystery of the altar stone of Stonehenge, weeks after geologists sensationally revealed that the huge neolithic rock had been transported hundreds of miles to Wiltshire from the very north of Scotland.
That discovery, described as “jaw-dropping” by one of the scientists involved, established definitively that the six-tonne megalith had not been brought from Wales, as had long been believed, but came from sandstone deposits in an area encompassing the isles of Orkney and Shetland and a coastal strip on the north-east Scottish mainland.
Many experts assumed that the most likely place of origin was Orkney, based on the islands’ rich neolithic culture and tradition of monument building.
But a separate academic study has now found that Orkney is not, in fact, the source of the altar stone, meaning the tantalising hunt for its place of origin goes on..."
Look, when will the "scientists" admit that the Lizard People brought the stones from the far side of the moon‽ NASA is covering up the pictures from Luna 3 showing the excavation, but if we ever really land people on the moon
... I'm sorry. I just can't. The amount of crazy is simply too hard to emulate.
I know. When a technology is replaced by something better, we tend to lose common knowledge, and sometimes all knowledge, of how to do it most effectively.
Sometimes, it's not replaced, just lost and we can't replicate it (Roman concrete, until recently). Sometimes, it's just not relevant and the majority of people never learn or know how to do it anymore (knapping). Sometimes it's lost because nobody has done it on so long and there are few or no records - we can reverse engineer and make educated guesses, but we can't be certain about how they did it, and we probably can't do it as well without cheating with newer technology (Egyptian pyramids).
I completely agree with you, and knapping is one of my favorite examples. It's something nearly everyone could do, and do pretty darned well, at one point. And now now almost nobody can do it, or even know how to, except for some indigenous communities and a few enthusiasts. Giant public works projects, like Stonehenge, Pyramids, and Easter Island are even harder, because they did it all the time and were good at it, we have so little written record of how because nobody bothered to write a manual, and it required the combined effort of a community.
Curiouser and curiouser. While the Orkneys did seem the obvious first place to look the logistics of getting the altar stone from there to Stonehenge would have been quite something. Dragging it from near Inverness is challenging enough but that would have been orders of magnitude harder.
Once you start accepting, people of the time could move such stones 100miles. (Seems undeniably atm)
Then it really is more about motive then distance. The same techniques work.
Overland. Getting a large stone from the Orkneys to the mainland would have been a considerable undertaking requiring a whole raft of new techniques (pun intended).
Stonehenge is the ultimate troll. Thousands of years ago someone convinced a workforce to move a massive rock thousands of miles to a place it didn't belong just to mess with people who later found it with no context.
I like to think if they turned it over it would just have LMAO inscribed.