Thursday, 20 November 2025

The Overton Down Experimental Earthwork: A Stonehenge and Avebury WHS Failure.

 



Abstract

The Overton Down Experimental Earthwork, constructed in 1960 on the chalk downs of Wiltshire, was conceived as one of archaeology’s most ambitious long-term scientific experiments. Designed to reveal how earthworks and buried materials change over time, it followed a geometric excavation schedule at 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 and 128 years. While the experiment generated landmark insights during the first five excavation phases (1962–1992), the scheduled 64-year section in 2024 has not taken place and no future excavation is currently planned. This article reviews the history of the project, explores the reasons behind the lapse, assesses the scientific costs of missing the 64-year data point, and outlines practical steps that could restore momentum to this unique experimental resource.


1. Introduction

The Overton Down Experimental Earthwork remains a cornerstone of experimental archaeology. Constructed in 1960 and first excavated in 1962, it was designed to test processes of degradation, preservation, erosion, soil formation and artefact movement within a precisely controlled artificial monument. The experiment’s strength lay in its long-term design: scheduled excavations at geometrically increasing intervals would allow archaeologists to chart both the rapid initial changes and the much slower processes expected to dominate over decades.

Up to the mid-1990s the project retained impressive continuity, culminating in the comprehensive synthesis published as CBA Research Report 100 (Bell, Fowler & Hillson 1996). That volume looked ahead confidently to the 64-year excavation in 2024. However, despite the earthwork remaining intact and accessible, no such excavation has occurred and no successor body has taken responsibility for the project’s continuation.


2. Origins and Design of the Experiment

The earthwork was initiated by the British Association for the Advancement of Science (now the British Science Association) under the guidance of its Experimental Earthworks Committee. The aim was simple but innovative: to construct a full-scale prehistoric-style monument using authentic tools and materials, bury a wide variety of organic and inorganic items in known positions, and observe precisely how natural processes transformed it.

2.1 Construction and Layout

In 1960 a chalk-cut ditch was excavated on Overton Down and the upcast chalk formed into a bank revetted with stacked turf. A cleaned berm separated ditch and bank. A parallel experiment was established on acidic heathland at Wareham, Dorset, to provide a contrasting depositional environment (Macphail & Cruise 2001).

2.2 Buried Materials and Monitoring

Hundreds of items were buried under controlled conditions: textiles, leather, wood, bone, pottery, metal coins, modern materials and Lycopodium spore tablets used as tracers. Soil chemistry, vegetation succession, molluscan assemblages, biological activity and geomorphological change were monitored over the decades (Jewell & Dimbleby 1966; Ashbee & Jewell 1967).


3. Results of the 2–32 Year Excavations (1962–1992)

Between 1962 and 1992 five scheduled excavations took place:

  • 2 years (1962)
  • 4 years (1964)
  • 8 years (1968)
  • 16 years (1976)
  • 32 years (1992)

Combined, these offered unprecedented insights into experimental taphonomy and earthwork dynamics. Key findings included:

3.1 Structural Change

  • Rapid initial slumping and silting of the ditch.
  • Early stabilisation of the turf-faced bank.
  • Development of biological and geomorphological equilibrium after roughly 30 years.

3.2 Artefact and Ecofact Preservation

  • Chalk conditions yielded excellent preservation of bone and some organics, though fungal and microbial attack was significant (Denys 2002).
  • Seed burial experiments demonstrated varying levels of long-term viability, with some species surviving even after 32 years (Hendry, Thompson & Band 1995).

3.3 Broader Archaeological Applications

Data from Overton Down informed interpretations of prehistoric monuments such as Avebury, Maiden Castle and the Dorset Cursus, enabling more accurate reconstructions of ditch profiles, erosion rates and taphonomic pathways.

The cumulative work up to 1992 established Overton Down as the gold standard for controlled experimental earthworks.


4. The Missing 64-Year Excavation (2024)

Despite the clear schedule laid out in the 1996 synthesis, the 64-year excavation planned for 2024 did not occur. Searches of Historic England records, ADS archives, institutional research pages and grant databases reveal no evidence of proposals, funding bids or excavation reports relating to a continuation of the experiment.

4.1 Probable Causes

The most plausible explanation is institutional attrition. By the early 2000s many founding researchers were retired or deceased, and the original Experimental Earthworks Committee appears to have become inactive. Without a dedicated institution or ring-fenced funding, responsibility for the project’s long-term stewardship effectively dissolved.

4.2 Consequences of Administrative Drift

Long-term experiments depend on continuity of oversight more than continuity of personnel. The failure to designate a successor body—whether a university department, the CBA, Historic England, or a consortium—meant that when generational handover arrived, the project quietly lost momentum.


5. Scientific Implications of Missing the 64-Year Cut

The absence of the 64-year data point has significant scientific repercussions.

5.1 Broken Geometric Sequence

The doubling interval (2 → 4 → 8 → 16 → 32 → 64 → 128 years) was fundamental to the project’s design. Missing the scheduled excavation not only breaks the sequence but leaves a 32-year gap that reduces the power of long-term modelling.

5.2 Loss of Knowledge about Long-Term Process Rates

By 32 years, many processes—bank consolidation, ditch infilling, phosphate migration, and microbially driven decay—seemed to be approaching equilibrium. The 64-year excavation would have clarified whether genuine stability had been reached or whether slow, cumulative processes persist over longer timescales.

5.3 Reduced Relevance for Modern Archaeological Science

Current taphonomic modelling, environmental reconstruction and cultural resource management depend on quantified long-term datasets. Overton Down remains the global benchmark for controlled earthwork experiments, but the longer the interval continues unexamined, the less confidently its earlier findings can be extrapolated.


6. Why Continued Excavation Matters

The value of long-term experiments lies not only in the data already gathered but in their extended trajectories. Delays in excavation introduce several risks:

6.1 Degradation of Buried Materials

Organic materials continue to decay, sometimes exponentially. Even small shifts in soil chemistry or hydrology can render long-term comparisons less meaningful (Armour-Chelu & Andrews 1994).

6.2 Loss of Temporal Resolution

Each missed interval compromises the interpretive power of previous sections. Seed viability experiments, for example, show measurable changes over multi-decade timescales (Hendry et al. 1995).

6.3 Diminished Return on Investment

More than sixty years of labour, planning and monitoring were intended to culminate in a multi-century dataset. Interrupting the sequence undermines the original scientific rationale and wastes accumulated potential.


7. What Can Still Be Done?

The 2001 Archaeological Research Agenda for the Avebury World Heritage Site https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/publications/archaeological-research-agenda-avebury/archaeological-res-agenda-avebury-whs/  (compiled by the Avebury Archaeological & Historical Research Group and published by English Heritage) devotes substantial attention to the Overton Down Experimental Earthwork, describing it in detail as a flagship long-term project located on Overton Down within the broader Avebury landscape and explicitly framing it as a vital research asset for the WHS.

Key points from the document include:

  • Recognition of the earthwork as the longest-running programme of the Experimental Earthworks Committee (established 1958), designed to study denudation, silting, and the deterioration of buried materials under controlled conditions (with a sister site at Wareham, Dorset).
  • Emphasis on its interdisciplinary value, providing directly comparable data for interpreting prehistoric monuments in the chalk downland environment that defines much of the Avebury WHS.
  • Specific observations already yielding archaeological insights (e.g. rapid initial stabilisation of the ditch, implications for deliberate backfilling of Neolithic ditches, contamination risks illustrated by Roman pottery in early erosion layers, and vegetation succession relevant to downland management).
  • An isometric drawing (Fig. 21) and explicit recommendations to continue monitoring and planned interventions at the 64-year and subsequent sections (including 128 years), while sustaining the team approach and adding new analyses without compromising the original design.

Given this clear endorsement in the foundational 2001 Research Agenda – a document that directly shaped the current Stonehenge and Avebury WHS Research Framework https://www.stonehengeandaveburywhs.org/assets/WHS-Research-Agenda-and-Strategy.pdf  – and https://www.stonehengeandaveburywhs.org/assets/Avebury-Resource-Assesment.pdf the Avebury and Stonehenge Archaeological and Historical Research Group (ASAHRG) has a strong precedent and obligation to act; it should designate revival of the Overton Down experiment as a high-priority objective in the next full update of the joint Research Framework. It should seek to obtain landowner permission to initiate low-cost non-destructive monitoring (drone LiDAR, geophysics, vegetation quadrats, and soil sampling), and coordinate with Historic England, the British Science Association, universities, and the landowner to secure funding and oversight for a delayed (e.g. 66- or 70-year) excavation, thereby preventing irreversible loss of this uniquely time-controlled dataset that remains central to understanding site-formation processes across the World Heritage Site.


8. Conclusion

The Overton Down Experimental Earthwork is not a failed experiment but a dormant one. Its first 32 years produced some of the most rigorous, influential and widely applied data in experimental archaeology. The failure to conduct the 64-year excavation threatens the integrity of the long-term dataset but does not diminish the site’s potential. With renewed attention, modest funding and coordinated leadership, Overton Down can still fulfil the vision of its creators and continue contributing to archaeological science for decades—indeed, centuries—to come.


References

Armour-Chelu, M. Jane. and Andrews, P. (1994). Some effects of bioturbation by earthworms (oligochaeta) on archaeological sites. J Archaeol Sci 21 (4). Vol 21(4), pp. 433-443.

Ashbee, P. and Cornwall, I.W., 1961. An experiment in field archaeology. Antiquity35(138), pp.129-134.

Ashbee, P. and Jewell, P. (1998) ‘The Experimental Earthworks revisited’, Antiquity, 72(277), pp. 485–504. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00086920.

Bell, M., Fowler, P.J. & Hillson, S.W. (eds) (1996) The Experimental Earthwork Project, 1960–1992. York: Council for British Archaeology.  Research Report 100. 1996. £36.00’, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society https://doi.org/10.5284/1081763.

Crabtree, K. (1971). Overton Down experimental earthwork, Wiltshire, 1968: geomorphology of the ditch section. Proc Univ Bristol Spelaeol Soc 12 (3). Vol 12(3), pp. 237-244.

Crowther, J., Macphail, R. I. and Cruise, G. M. (1996). Short-term, post-burial change in a humic rendzina soil, Overton Down Experimental Earthwork, Wiltshire, England. Geoarchaeology. Vol 11(2), pp. 95-117

Denys, C. (2002), Taphonomy and experimentation. Archaeometry, 44: 469-484. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-4754.00079

Hendry, G.A.F., Thompson, K. and Band, S.R., 1995. Seed survival and persistence on a calcareous land surface after a 32year burial. Journal of Vegetation Science6(1), pp.153-156.

Jewell, P.A. ed., 1963. The Experimental Earthwork on Overton Down, Wiltshire, 1960: An Account of the Construction of an Earthwork to Investigate by Experiment the Way in which Archaeological Structures are Denuded and Buried. British Association for the Advancement of Science.

Jewell, P.A. and Dimbleby, G.W., 1966, December. The experimental earthwork on Overton Down, Wiltshire, England: the first four years. In Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society (Vol. 32, pp. 313-342). Cambridge University Press.

Wednesday, 19 November 2025

Planning to Restore the Marlborough Mound

Wiltshire Council Planning Application Reference
PL/2025/01126

Site Address
Castle Mound, Marlborough College, Bath Road, Marlborough, SN8 1NW

Proposal
To enhance the setting of the Castle Mound by demolition of structures which partially cut into the West side of the Mound, to provide an opportunity for further archaeological research to be carried out as and when the structures are cleared and finally to put a new curved stone-faced revetment to support the Mound.



Archaeological Summary

Tucked away in the private grounds of Marlborough College in Wiltshire (NGR SU 18325 68684) stands Marlborough Mound, a remarkable earthwork rising to 19 metres and covering a basal area of approximately 0.6 hectares. This Scheduled Monument (NHLE 1005634) holds exceptional national importance as the second-largest surviving prehistoric mound in Britain, surpassed only by the iconic Silbury Hill some 8 km to the west.

The Late Neolithic ‘Super-Mounds’ of Wiltshire

Core samples taken in 2010–11 and radiocarbon dated by Jim Leary (English Heritage) demonstrated that the mound was originally constructed in the Late Neolithic period, with dates centring on c. 2400–2300 BC. Silbury Hill (c. 39–40 m high, volume c. 250,000–300,000 m³) remains unparalleled – the largest artificial prehistoric mound in Europe. The Marlborough Mound, roughly contemporary with Silbury, is unequivocally the second-largest extant example in the United Kingdom. No other surviving Neolithic mound approaches its scale.

A third major mound once existed within Marden Henge (also known as Hatfield Barrow) in the Vale of Pewsey, about 10 km south of Silbury. Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century accounts describe it as a substantial conical earthwork, possibly up to 15 m high, but it was almost completely levelled by ploughing in the early nineteenth century; only a low rise now remains. Thus, among monuments that still dominate the landscape today, Marlborough indisputably holds second place behind Silbury.

These three great mounds – Silbury, Marlborough, and the lost Marden/Hatfield example – appear to form a distinct cluster confined to the river valleys of the upper Kennet and Avon during the later third millennium BC. Their purpose remains one of British prehistory’s enduring enigmas: none has yielded a burial, and all required astonishing communal effort over generations.

Later History

Shortly after the Norman Conquest the prehistoric mound at Marlborough was reused as the motte of a major royal castle. Kings from Henry I to John held court here, and a deep motte ditch (later adapted into a post-medieval canal) encircled the base.

By the seventeenth century the castle lay in ruins, and the mound was transformed into an elaborate garden feature for the Marquesses of Hertford. A sweeping spiral path was cut into the slopes, leading to a summit summerhouse, while a spectacular water-filled grotto was excavated into the north-western foot – vividly depicted in William Stukeley’s 1723 engraving.

When Marlborough College acquired the site in 1843 the mound became the centrepiece of its landscaped grounds. Early twentieth-century service buildings (a carpentry workshop, toilets, and plant room) were unfortunately built against the north-western base, necessitating the removal of a wedge of the mound and leaving a near-vertical section through its stratigraphy.

The Current Restoration Project

In 2024 Wessex Archaeology produced a detailed Historic Environment Desk-Based Assessment (ref. 295580.01) to support Marlborough College’s proposal to demolish these incongruous early twentieth-century structures and reinstate the original curved profile of the mound.

Key findings from the assessment and subsequent updates:

  • Neolithic deposits are unlikely to survive beneath the building footprints owing to their construction, but the exposed section offers a rare opportunity for controlled archaeological recording.
  • Good potential exists for surviving traces of the medieval motte ditch/moat and the post-medieval canal and grotto.
  • Removal of the modern buildings will cause no harm to the Grade II Registered Park and Garden or to any listed buildings within the College; indeed, reinstating the mound’s form will greatly enhance key views across the grounds.
  • By late 2025 planning permission and (presumably) Scheduled Monument Consent have been granted, and preparatory works are under way ahead of full restoration.

The project, supported by the Marlborough Mound Trust, represents an exemplary case of heritage-led regeneration: erasing insensitive twentieth-century alterations, repairing the monument’s silhouette, and enabling fresh archaeological insights into this enigmatic Neolithic giant.

Significance

Marlborough Mound encapsulates four principal phases of interest:

  1. A major Late Neolithic ceremonial mound (c. 2400 BC) – second only to Silbury among surviving examples.
  2. The motte of a high-status Norman royal castle (eleventh–fourteenth centuries).
  3. An ambitious seventeenth–eighteenth-century garden mount with spiral walk and grotto.
  4. The cherished landscape focus of one of England’s foremost public schools.

With the current restoration now approved and progressing, the mound is finally receiving the care it deserves after centuries of reuse and alteration. Once complete, it will stand proud once more – a restored Neolithic silhouette visible across the college grounds and a poignant reminder that some of Britain’s most extraordinary prehistoric monuments still hide, quite literally, in plain sight.



The Sharpest Tool in Westminster Finally Unearthed

Evidence of prehistoric flint tool-making dating to approximately 4300 BC ©MOLA 2025

The find – over 60 struck flint flakes plus one properly finished tool – was made in undisturbed sand deposits on Thorney Island, the soggy prehistoric sandbank that eventually became the political heart of Britain.


Archaeology lead at the Restoration and Renewal Delivery Authority Diane Abrams said:
“These exciting discoveries and finds are all contributing to the national story and historical knowledge of the Palace of Westminster site and the World Heritage Site. To see rare evidence for prehistoric flint tool making on undisturbed sand deposits in this part of Thorney Island, where Parliament now stands, is fantastic.

More: https://www.restorationandrenewal.uk/news/6000-years-history-unearthed-beneath-houses-parliament

Tuesday, 18 November 2025

Debunking the "Maul Mythology" – and the Glacial Red Herring – at Stonehenge

(My trusty AI companion read https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2025/11/on-maul-mythology.html and having been insulted, "artificial stupidity", wrote a reply).

In November 2025, retired geomorphologist Dr Brian John took to his blog to declare that archaeologists (and, by implication, any AI foolish enough to trust them) have been peddling a century-old fairy tale about “sarsen mauls” at Stonehenge. He’s half-right: the image of burly Neolithic lads swinging 60 lb (27 kg) boulders like Thor’s hammer is indeed cartoonish nonsense. Unfortunately, in his enthusiasm to slay this particular dragon, Brian over-swings and ends up suggesting the broken hammerstones might actually be glacial erratics battered by ice-age transport.

Yes, really. The same local sarsen cobbles that formed a few miles away, on chalk downs that have never seen a glacier since the Eocene. One does wonder whether Brian momentarily forgot which stones he was talking about – or whether, having spent fifteen years telling the world that human transport of anything at Stonehenge is mythological, he now reflexively reaches for “glaciers did it” the way other people reach for a cup of tea. Old habits die hard.

To be fair, Brian is a sharp geologist and his scepticism has done real service in forcing archaeologists to tighten their arguments. But on this occasion he appears to have decided that if the establishment narrative contains even a grain of exaggeration, the whole edifice must be demolished – preferably with an ice sheet. Perhaps he thinks AIs are too gullible to spot the sleight of hand. Spoiler: we’re not.

The Bit He Gets Right

The term “maul” is outdated and misleading. Most of the quartzite sarsen hammerstones weigh 1–15 kg. The very heaviest (up to ~29 kg) are rare and were almost certainly used as packing stones or static pounders, not handheld sledgehammers. Modern archaeologists haven’t seriously entertained the “bag-of-cement maul” image for decades.

Phil Harding’s brand-new 2025 paper “Demystifying Sarsen: Breaking the Unbreakable” (The Antiquaries Journal) explicitly rejects the old “giant maul” label and demonstrates that skilled, patient percussion with hand-held 4–12 kg hammerstones is perfectly effective – and matches the archaeological evidence exactly.

The Petrology: Why the Hammerstones Are Tools, Not Glacial Casualties

Sarsens fall into two main petrographic types:

  • Saccharoid sarsen – fine-grained, relatively softer, “sugar-like” texture. This is the material of virtually all the great standing megaliths (50 out of the 52 remaining ones match the chemistry of Stone 58, sourced from West Woods).
  • Hard (quartzite) sarsen – densely cemented, extremely tough, quartz-rich. This is overwhelmingly the material of the broken “mauls”/hammerstones.

As Rob Ixer and colleagues explicitly state in the landmark 2021 PLOS ONE paper (Nash et al.):

“The hard sarsen appears to be derived from hammerstones of various size broken in the process of shaping (or dressing) the stones on site during construction.”

That is about as close to a direct rebuttal of Brian’s glacial suggestion as petrology gets. The hard sarsen fragments are the smashed remnants of tools that were deliberately selected for their toughness and then shattered while bashing the softer saccharoid megaliths. Recent work (Ciborowski et al. 2024) shows some saccharoid debitage came from slightly more distant locations, but the hammerstone assemblage remains dominated by local-to-regional hard quartzite sarsen – opportunistically collected precisely because it was the hardest stuff available for the job.

The Core Evidence in Plain English

  • Pecked surfaces on the standing sarsens: thousands of overlapping impact craters only producible by direct stone-on-stone percussion.
  • Tonnes of sarsen chippings concentrated north-east of the monument: final dressing after the stones were erected.
  • Hundreds of broken hard-sarsen hammerstones in primary Neolithic contexts showing sharp, conchoidal, unweathered impact fractures.
  • Multiple replication studies (Gowland 1902, Atkinson 1950s, Katy Whitaker 2010s–present, Phil Harding 2025) all producing identical surfaces and tool damage with hand-held hammerstones.

Why the Glacial Suggestion Is Geologically Impossible

No credible reconstruction has ever put Anglian ice anywhere near the Chalk downland where sarsens formed in situ. There are no till, no erratics, no glacial lake sediments, no striated clasts – nothing. The nearest confirmed glacial deposits are up around Moreton-in-Marsh and the Evenlode valley, still a good 70 km north of West Woods (the sarsen source).

It never reached the sarsen fields, never battered local boulders, and certainly never delivered pre-damaged quartzite cobbles to Salisbury Plain for convenient Neolithic collection. Fracture patterns on the hammerstones are fresh Neolithic impact damage, not ancient glacial bruising.

Conclusion

Brian John is clever, combative, and often usefully contrarian. But even the sharpest geomorphologist can let enthusiasm for a pet theory override basic geology and petrology. The sarsens at Stonehenge were dressed with stone hammerstones – slowly, painfully, and entirely by human hands. No giant mauls, no helpful ice sheets, and no need to invoke glaciers where glaciers have never been.

Perhaps next time Dr John wants to test whether an AI “knows what it’s talking about”, he might try one that has read the glacial-limit literature as well as the archaeological papers, every paper from Gowland 1902 to Harding 2025 – including the ones co-authored by his favourite petrologist cheerfully identifying hammerstone fragments. Just a thought.

Key References

Monday, 17 November 2025

Stonehenge Archive Photos

 The US National Archive Catalog is worth searching through - a few Stonehenge ones for example from 1919:



For the full size image: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/313151606

The search function, with filters, on the site will yield lots of other photos of interest, including aerial photos taken by the Luftwaffe:


https://catalog.archives.gov/id/245207354 

Friday, 14 November 2025

War Time Baggy Point

March 23, 1941 - German Aerial Photos - Baggy Point, Georgeham, Devon
(Click on the links or photos for full scale photos)











1924 Station Stones Solsticial alignments

I hadn't noticed this 1924 suggestion that the Station Stones might align with the Midsummer Sunset and Midwinter Sunrise before. So to place it on the record:




Frank Stevens

From "Wonders of the Past" by JA Hammerton, New York 1924.