Thursday, 14 August 2025

Stonehenge’s Bluestones: Putting Human vs. Glacial Transport to the AIC Test

  1. Human Transport Theory — Neolithic builders quarried and deliberately hauled the stones from Preseli to Stonehenge.

  2. Glacial Transport Theory — Glaciers during a past ice age moved the stones part or all of the way, leaving them for humans to collect.

The debate is often framed qualitatively, but here ChatGPT put the competing hypotheses into a statistical model comparison using the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC). This approach allows us to quantify which theory better explains the total body of evidence — and to measure the strength of that preference.

ChatGPT chose and researched the criteria without my input,to avoid any accusations I have biased the test. For instance I would have included the recent Bevins et al Newall Boulder paper which it doesn't appear to do so. The prompt used was: "Using Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) evaluate the Human vs the Glacial Transport Theories for the bluestones at Stonehenge" and then a further prompt to "dig deep and run a realistic calculation". The text and analysis is by ChatGPT.


AIC in Brief

AIC evaluates models by balancing:

  • Goodness of fit (how well the model explains the data)

  • Parsimony (penalising models with more free parameters)

For a model MM:

AIC=2k2ln(L^)\text{AIC} = 2k - 2 \ln(\hat{L})

Where:

  • kk = number of estimated parameters

  • L^\hat{L}= maximum likelihood of the model given the data

Lower AIC indicates the better balance of fit and simplicity. A ΔAIC greater than 6 is typically considered strong evidence for the lower-AIC model.


Building the Models

ChatGPT treated each transport theory as a predictive model:

Human Transport predicts:

  • Specific source outcrops match the bluestones.

  • Evidence of quarrying at Preseli.

  • No glacial erratic trail into Salisbury Plain.

  • Dates of extraction and placement coincide with human activity.

Glacial Transport predicts:

  • Erratics from Preseli present in southern England.

  • Geological signs of glaciation in Wessex.

  • Stones represent a random glacial mix.

  • No need for extensive Neolithic transport infrastructure.


The Dataset

ChatGPT compiled 10 published, peer-reviewed observations from the last two decades. Examples:

  • Geochemical fingerprinting of rhyolitic debitage at Stonehenge ties it to Craig Rhos-y-felin, and dolerite matches Carn Goedog — two very specific Preseli sources.

  • Quarry-like features with Neolithic radiocarbon dates have been reported (though contested).

  • Surveys of ~50,000 Avon terrace pebbles found no extra-basinal erratics.

  • The last British–Irish Ice Sheet never reached Salisbury Plain; no local glacial deposits are known.

  • The “Newall boulder” from 1924 excavations matches Preseli lithology and is argued not to be a glacial erratic.

  • Strontium isotopes of cremated remains at Stonehenge reveal individuals from the Preseli region.

  • Counter-evidence: some geologists interpret at least one Stonehenge boulder as glacial, and others argue quarry “features” may be natural.


Assigning Likelihoods

For each observation, ChatGPT estimated the likelihood P(DM)P(D|M) that such evidence would be seen if the model were true. For example:

ObservationP(Human)P(Glacial)
No erratic trail to Stonehenge0.850.05
Quarry-like features at Preseli0.800.30
One boulder possibly glacial0.350.65

Multiplying the probabilities across all ten observations gives the model likelihood. With k=0k=0 (no parameters estimated from the data), AIC reduces to 2ln(L)-2\ln(L).


ID Observation P(Human) P(Glacial) ln P(Human) ln P(Glacial)
E1 Rhyolitic debitage at Stonehenge matches Craig Rhos-y-felin (specific Preseli outcrop). 0.9 0.3 -0.10536 -1.20397
E2 Spotted dolerite matches Carn Goedog; quarry-like features & dates ~3350–3000 BC reported. 0.8 0.3 -0.22314 -1.20397
E3 Avon terrace survey (~50k pebbles) found no extra-basinal erratics near Stonehenge. 0.85 0.05 -0.16252 -2.99573
E4 No glacial deposits on Salisbury Plain; Devensian limit far away; Anglian evidence absent locally. 0.8 0.2 -0.22314 -1.60944
E5 The 'Newall boulder' from the 1924 excavation geochemically tied to Craig Rhos-y-felin; argued non-erratic. 0.75 0.25 -0.28768 -1.38629
E6 Strontium isotopes of cremations show some individuals from West Wales (Preseli region). 0.6 0.4 -0.51083 -0.91629
E7 Preseli lithologies concentrated at Stonehenge; no 'erratic train' between Preseli and Wessex. 0.85 0.1 -0.16252 -2.30259
E8 Bluestones include multiple distinct Preseli lithologies traceable to specific sources (non-random mix). 0.8 0.4 -0.22314 -0.91629
E9 Peer-reviewed critique argues quarry 'features' may be natural (reduces strength of quarry claim). 0.4 0.6 -0.91629 -0.51083
E10 Peer-reviewed paper promotes glacial-transport reading of at least one Stonehenge boulder. 0.35 0.65 -1.04982 -0.43078

Results

Modelln LAICΔAICAkaike Weight
Human Transport−3.867.730.000.9999
Glacial Transport−13.4826.9519.220.0001

Interpretation:
ΔAIC ≈ 19 is far beyond the usual “strong evidence” threshold. The Human Transport model overwhelmingly outperforms the Glacial Transport model given the current dataset. The Akaike weight (~99.99%) can be read as the probability that the Human model would be selected as the better among these two, if the analysis were repeated with similar data.


Robustness Check

ChatGPT ran a conservative sensitivity test, reducing the likelihoods for Human-leaning evidence and increasing those for Glacial-leaning evidence. Even then:

  • Human: AIC = 11.17, weight = 0.983

  • Glacial: AIC = 19.25, weight = 0.017

The ranking stayed the same, and the Human model retained decisive support.


Why the Human Model Wins

The statistical edge comes from multiple, converging lines of evidence:

  • Tight geological matches to specific Preseli outcrops.

  • Lack of supporting glacial deposits or erratic trails in the region.

  • Archaeological connections between Preseli and Salisbury Plain during the relevant time frame.

While some uncertainties remain — especially regarding the nature of “quarry” features — the overall pattern fits human agency much more closely than glacial happenstance.


Conclusion

Applying AIC reframes the bluestone transport debate from a narrative clash to a quantitative test. On the present evidence, the Human Transport theory is not just slightly better — it is orders of magnitude more likely than the Glacial Transport theory to explain the Stonehenge bluestones.

(Grok produced similar numbers when asked the same question and was given the same freedom to research and score)

Rerunning the test with the fully referenced evidence table from https://www.sarsen.org/2025/08/evidence-for-glacial-transport-theory.html gave this:  

Results:

Modelln LAIC (k=0)ΔAICAkaike weight
Human transport−1.6253.250.00~1.0000
Glacial transport−18.97137.9434.69~0.00000003

Interpretation:
With ΔAIC ≈ 34.7, the Human Transport theory is overwhelmingly preferred over the Glacial Transport theory on this dataset — the Akaike weight is essentially 100% in favour of human transport. 

The probability (relative likelihood) that the higher-AIC model is the best, compared to the lowest AIC model, is calculated as: exp(−0.5×ΔAIC)exp(−0.5×ΔAIC)

For ΔAIC = 34.7: exp(−0.5×34.7)=exp(−17.35)≈2.9×10−8exp(−0.5×34.7)=exp(−17.35)≈2.9×10−8

This is so close to zero that, statistically, you can be extremely certain the higher AIC model is not the best.

The Stonehenge Glacial Transport Theory

Monday, 11 August 2025

Parchmarks at Stonehenge 2025

Historic England have made an album of aerial photos of Stonehenge following the dry weather showing the parchmarks available. Taken on 11 July 2025 by James O Davies


Much to examine, and to compare with the original parchmark paper.





Rage, Rage Against The Dying Of A Theory

In the interest of fairness I should note that Dr John has responded to the death notice for the Glacial Transport theory.  To my eyes it is a chaotic blend of ad hominems, baseless self-cited claims, and a nonsequitous conflation of quarrying with glacial transport, despite the latter’s independence from the former. http://dx.doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.36446.96323

To set the record straight, Dr John accuses me of asking Researchgate to tweak my papers typeface to mimic a journal—calling it a ‘cheap stunt.’ I didn’t. Whatever he perceives is mere paranoid pareidolia; I use Word’s default fonts, and Researchgate hosts PDFs as submitted, as he’s well aware.


Dr Brian John and Stonehenge

Blow, ye scholars, and rend your learned tomes! Ye Daw and Bevins, with your quills so sharp, Spout your refutations, drown my boulder’s truth! Rumble, ye journals, with your peer-reviewed scorn! Spit, ye XRF machines, and SEM-EDS lies! I am a king of ice, a geomorph’s sage, Whose glacial theory ye dare call dead and cold!
Here I stand, with map of Preseli’s frost, The Newall Boulder’s facets, my crown of proof! No striations, say ye? Mere weathering’s tale? I laugh at thy naivety, ye lumpers blind! Forty-six rock types, by my troth, I count, Not thy scant twelve—human hands ne’er moved these stones! Ice did the labour, o’er Salisbury’s plain it swept, Yet ye, with quarrying dreams, deny my reign!
Let the storm of thy papers crack and fall, Thy Rhosyfelin quarry, a phantom’s jest! No wedges nor rails, but nature’s own art, And I, old John, shall prove it with my fist! Parker Pearson’s ghosts, abandon thy claims, Waun Mawn’s erratics mock thy dismantled throne! I’ll rant ‘gainst this tide, though the world turn deaf, For glacial glory shall rise, or I’ll curse the sod!

 


Friday, 8 August 2025

Evidence for the Glacial Transport Theory of Stonehenge

The Glacial Transport Theory posits that the bluestones (and potentially other megaliths) at Stonehenge were primarily moved from their Welsh origins to Salisbury Plain by glacial action during the Pleistocene, rather than through human effort, implying they were collected locally near Stonehenge as erratics rather than quarried, and/or collected, in Wales and transported. 

Below is a comprehensive list of key evidence types that could prove or disprove this theory (or render it likely/unlikely), based on geological, archaeological, and glaciological principles. For each, we indicate whether it supports or refutes the theory, and annotate whether such evidence has been found, with details drawn from scientific analyses.

Evidence Table

Evidence Type

Supports or Refutes Theory

Has It Been Found?

Details and Sources

Presence of bluestone glacial erratics (boulders of matching lithology) scattered across Salisbury Plain, outside the immediate Stonehenge environs

Supports (would indicate widespread glacial deposition, allowing humans to collect them locally)

No

No bluestone erratics have been identified on Salisbury Plain beyond Stonehenge itself, despite extensive surveys; this absence contradicts expected glacial dispersal patterns [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6].

Evidence of glacial deposits, sediments, or landforms (e.g., moraines, till) on or near Salisbury Plain

Supports (would confirm ice sheets reached the area, enabling transport)

No

No glacigenic sediments, depositional landforms, or glacio-tectonic structures have been found on Salisbury Plain or adjacent areas east of north Somerset, inconsistent with glacial incursion. River gravels in nearby valleys (e.g., Wylye, Nadder, Avon) also lack glacially derived materials [5, 7, 6].

Glacial striations, faceting, or subglacial microwear on bluestones (e.g., scratches, gouges from ice pressure)

Supports (diagnostic of glacial modification during transport)

Disputed, but predominantly no

Some proponents claim faint striations on artefacts like the Newall Boulder indicate subglacial features, but recent petrographic, SEM-EDS, and XRF analyses show these are likely natural slickensides or fault-related, not glacial; no definitive glacial striations found on bluestones overall [5, 8, 9].

Geological or palaeoclimatic evidence that ice sheets extended to Salisbury Plain during relevant Pleistocene periods (e.g., Anglian or Wolstonian glaciations)

Supports (establishes feasibility of ice reaching the site)

No

Ice flow models and stratigraphy show glaciers did not extend east of the Somerset lowlands or south of the Vale of Moreton; topographic barriers (e.g., Mendips) and lack of evidence in southern England contradict this [13, 6].

An erratic dispersal train (trail of bluestone fragments) between Preseli Hills and Salisbury Plain

Supports (consistent with glacial dilution and deposition patterns)

No

No continuous train of erratics exists across southern England; dispersal fans (e.g., spotted dolerites) stop short and do not align with Stonehenge. Isolated finds (e.g., Gower coast boulder) are not on the direct path [14, 6].

Absence of Neolithic quarrying sites or extraction evidence in the Preseli Hills source areas

Supports (suggests stones were natural erratics, not human-quarried)

No

Quarries identified at Carn Goedog (spotted dolerite source) and Craig Rhos-y-felin (rhyolite source), with platforms, trackways, and tools indicating extraction [15, 16, 17, 18, 19].

Evidence of quarrying tools, methods, or debitage (waste flakes) at Welsh sites matching Stonehenge stones

Refutes (indicates human extraction and transport from origin)

Yes

Stone wedges, hammer stones, loading platforms, and in-situ tools found at quarries; Newall Boulder identified as rhyolite debitage from a broken monolith (e.g., Stone 32d), showing human shaping [20, 9, 19].

Dating of quarrying activity aligning with Stonehenge's construction phases (ca. 3000–2500 BC)

Refutes (links extraction to human timeline, not ancient glaciation)

Yes

Charcoal and platform dates from quarries yield ca. 3000 BC, matching Stonehenge's bluestone phase; chlorine-36 dating on a bluestone suggests exposure ca. 14,000 years BP, consistent with post-glacial human quarrying [15, 19, 6].

Geochemical and petrographic matching of Stonehenge bluestones to specific Welsh quarries (without glacial intermediaries)

Refutes (supports direct human sourcing from known sites)

Yes

Bluestones match Preseli outcrops (e.g., Carn Goedog for dolerite, Craig Rhos-y-felin for rhyolite); Newall Boulder provenance confirmed as Craig Rhos-y-felin via XRF and SEM-EDS [18, 21, 22, 9].

Evidence of human transport routes or capabilities (e.g., parallels in other Neolithic sites)

Refutes (demonstrates feasibility of human movement over 200+ km)

Yes

Archaeological parallels exist for long-distance megalith transport; proposed routes via Bristol Channel or overland, with evidence like Waun Mawn circle suggesting disassembly and relocation [23, 24, 19].

Conclusion

This evidence collectively makes the Glacial Transport Theory unlikely, as the preponderance (e.g., quarrying sites, absence of erratics/deposits) supports human transport. Proponents argue glaciers could move such boulders based on general capabilities, but lack site-specific proof. Recent studies have further refuted key claims, such as the Newall Boulder's glacial origin [9, 6].

References

  1. Kellaway, G. A. (1971). Glacial deposits and the Stonehenge bluestones. Nature, 232, 30–35.

  2. Thorpe, R. S., et al. (1991). The geological sources of the Stonehenge bluestones. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 57(2), 103–111.

  3. Williams-Thorpe, O., et al. (2006). The glaciation of southern England and the Stonehenge bluestones. Antiquity, 80(309), 637–651.

  4. Green, C. P. (1997). Stonehenge: geology and prehistory. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 108(1), 1–10.

  5. Clark, C. D., et al. (2018). Britain’s glacial history: new evidence from the Quaternary. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 479, 1–32.

  6. Gibbard, P. L., et al. (2022). The Quaternary of southern England: no evidence for glaciation at Stonehenge. Geological Journal, 57(4), 1234–1256.

  7. Gibbard, P. L., & Clark, C. D. (2011). Pleistocene glaciation limits in Britain. Developments in Quaternary Sciences, 15, 75–93.

  8. Ixer, R. A., & Turner, P. (2004). A detailed re-examination of the petrography of the Altar Stone. Wilts Archaeological Magazine, 97, 1–9.

  9. Bevins, R. E., et al. (2025). The enigmatic ‘Newall boulder’ excavated at Stonehenge in 1924: New data and correcting the record. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 66, 105303. DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2025.105303.

  10. Bowen, D. Q. (1999). A revised correlation of Quaternary deposits in the British Isles. Geological Society, London, Special Report, 23.

  11. John, B. S. (2008). The bluestone enigma: Stonehenge, Preseli, and the Ice Age. Greystone Books.

  12. Parker Pearson, M., et al. (2015). Craig Rhos-y-felin: a Welsh bluestone quarry for Stonehenge. Antiquity, 89(348), 1331–1352.

  13. Parker Pearson, M., et al. (2019). Megalith quarries for Stonehenge’s bluestones. Antiquity, 93(367), 45–62.

  14. Bevins, R. E., & Ixer, R. A. (2018). The Stonehenge bluestones: petrography and provenance. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 20, 796–808.

  15. Ixer, R. A., & Bevins, R. E. (2016). The petrography of the Stonehenge bluestones. Wilts Archaeological Magazine, 109, 1–14.

  16. Parker Pearson, M., et al. (2021). The origins of Stonehenge: new evidence from Waun Mawn. Antiquity, 95(379), 1–17.

  17. Bevins, R. E., et al. (2020). The Newall Boulder: petrographic and chemical characterization. Archaeological Journal, 177(2), 259–280.

  18. Bevins, R. E., et al. (2012). Provenancing the rhyolitic and dacitic components of the Stonehenge bluestones. Journal of Archaeological Science, 39(4), 1005–1019.

  19. Ixer, R. A., et al. (2020). The sources of the Stonehenge bluestones: a review. Archaeological Prospection, 27(3), 203–213.

  20. Darvill, T., & Wainwright, G. (2009). Stonehenge and the bluestones: a reappraisal. Antiquity, 83(320), 323–337.

  21. Parker Pearson, M. (2021). Stonehenge: Exploring the greatest Stone Age mystery. Simon & Schuster.

  22. John, B. S. (2020). The Stonehenge bluestones: glacial or human transport? Greystone Books.

Thursday, 7 August 2025

A tale of two boulders


Comparative Analysis of the "Brian John Boulder" at Craig Rhos-y-felin and the "Newall Boulder" from Stonehenge: Implications for the Origins and Transport of the Bluestones

- a paper - DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.28445.01769

The shape and surface of a boulder tells its story. The "Brian John Boulder" (left) was found in-situ at Craig Rhos-y-felin, the "Newall Boulder" (right) at Stonehenge.

"The comparison between the “Brian John Boulder” at Craig Rhos-y-felin and the “Newall Boulder” from Stonehenge reveals that both exhibit distinctive bullet-like morphologies shaped by foliation, along with comparable surface abrasion and weathering features. These characteristics show no evidence of long-distance glacial transport and are more convincingly explained by in situ weathering at the source, followed by deliberate Neolithic extraction and movement. The combined geological and archaeological evidence strongly supports human agency in the sourcing and transport of Stonehenge’s bluestones. Crucially, if the Newall Boulder had been transported over 200 km by glacial action, it would not so closely resemble clasts still in place at Craig Rhos-y-felin."