Sunday, 29 March 2026

The Stones Are Losing Their Pull - What's Going Wrong

(A guest Op-Ed)

For a family of four arriving at Stonehenge on a summer Saturday, the bill starts at roughly £80 before anyone has set foot near the stones.9 They will queue for a shuttle bus, walk a roped-off path at a polite distance from the monument, and be back in the car park inside two hours. Meanwhile, the Natural History Museum — which last year welcomed a record-breaking 7.1 million visitors — costs nothing at all.13 Increasingly, families are making exactly that calculation. And the numbers show it.

In 2025, Stonehenge welcomed 1,253,405 visitors — an 8 per cent fall on the previous year and roughly 22 per cent below its pre-pandemic peak of approximately 1.6 million in 2019.2,19 It slipped to 25th in the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions rankings, behind Windsor Castle and RHS Garden Wisley.1 This happened in a year when the broader sector managed a modest 2 per cent increase to 165 million total visits across 409 ALVA sites. Even that aggregate figure remained 7 per cent below 2019.1 Stonehenge, in other words, is not merely failing to recover from the pandemic — it is actively falling behind in a sector that is itself still struggling.

This is not a blip. It is the visible symptom of a deeper malaise at English Heritage, the charity responsible for more than 400 historic sites across England. The organisation’s own 2024/25 Annual Report reveals that pay-to-enter sites collectively attracted only 5.7 million visitors against internal targets, contributing to financial strain so severe that it triggered a “reshaping programme.”7 That programme proposes at least 189 job losses — roughly 7 per cent of its 2,535-strong workforce — with cuts expected across curatorial, site management, marketing, and visitor operations roles.3,17 A further 21 sites face winter closures, and another 22 are being reclassified to open only on select days.4 One site, English Heritage has noted, welcomed just 11 visitors over an entire November weekend.5

Stonehenge was supposed to be the ballast against this kind of storm. As English Heritage’s highest-revenue generator — a site that operates without government subsidy and funds conservation across the portfolio through ticket sales, membership, and secondary spend — it is the engine that keeps the rest of the machine running. When the engine falters, everything downstream suffers. And English Heritage’s own board knows it is faltering. The Trust Board minutes from March 2025 recorded high visitor satisfaction across 20 surveyed sites, with improvements at many — “excluding Stonehenge.”6 The Annual Report quantified the gap: the overall visitor experience score dipped slightly to 8.79 out of 10, but strip out Stonehenge and it held steady at 8.98, with 70 per cent of visitors rating their experience “excellent.” Stonehenge’s increased weighting in the survey data coincided with a measurable drop in those top-tier ratings, prompting the board to commission action plans.7

The internal data merely confirms what visitors have been saying publicly for years. One Tripadvisor reviewer in September 2025 reported paying £34.50 for an adult ticket plus £3 for parking, only to find poorly maintained pathways between the visitor centre and the stones, and a general sense of commercial extraction from what should be a transcendent encounter with 5,000 years of human history.8 The recurring complaints are consistent: high prices for a managed experience that keeps people at arm’s length from the monument, overcrowding at peak times, a visitor centre that feels like a warehouse with a gift shop attached, and a lingering suspicion that the site is optimised for throughput rather than wonder. Travel bloggers have coined it a “megalithic disappointment” — a one-off bucket-list tick rather than something worth returning to.8,10

The cruel contrast is with institutions that have invested boldly and reaped the rewards. The Natural History Museum’s trajectory is instructive. Its visitor numbers are now 31 per cent above pre-pandemic levels — driven by reimagined garden spaces that attracted over 5 million visitors in their first year, a new permanent gallery on climate solutions that has already drawn more than 2 million people, and immersive experiences such as Our Story with David Attenborough.13,14 ALVA’s director, Bernard Donoghue, attributed the success in part to those transformed outdoor spaces, calling the museum an “astonishingly fun, joyful day out.”11 The lesson is not that Stonehenge should become a museum — it is that capital investment, continuously refreshed programming, and a commitment to opening new reasons to visit year after year can transform an institution’s fortunes even in a cost-of-living crisis. The Natural History Museum plans to open a new or revitalised permanent gallery every year until 2031.13 Stonehenge’s core offer, by contrast, has remained essentially static since the visitor centre opened in 2013: view the stones from afar, browse the exhibition, ride the shuttle, go home.

This matters because the competitive landscape has fundamentally shifted. Donoghue’s diagnosis of the wider sector is blunt: visitors today are “more tactical than ever in deciding how they spend their leisure pounds and their leisure hours” and their expectations of a great visit “are higher now than they have ever been.”11 The day trip to an attraction now competes within the family budget with free alternatives and streaming subscriptions. In that environment, a paid heritage site charging premium prices must deliver an experience that justifies the cost — not just once, but persuasively enough that visitors recommend it and consider returning. Stonehenge is increasingly failing that test. Academic research stretching back almost two decades has identified access restrictions, perceived over-commercialisation, and the gap between visitor expectations and reality as persistent weaknesses.12 The specific complaints have barely changed; only the ticket prices have — upward.

English Heritage is not unaware of the problem. Its 2025–2030 Strategic Plan speaks of ambitions under the banner “Care, Share, and Grow,” including better visitor experiences, enhanced education provision, and financial sustainability.7 Planning permission has been granted for a new Learning Centre and Neolithic classroom near the existing visitor facilities, due to open in autumn 2026.15 These are welcome, if overdue, steps. But a learning centre alone will not reverse a decline driven by value perception, logistical frustration, and emotional disappointment. Bolder measures are needed: dynamic pricing that rewards off-peak visits and makes the site accessible to families priced out of peak weekends; enhanced on-site interpretation that deepens engagement beyond the current walk-and-gawk circuit; investment in the kind of immersive, regularly refreshed programming that has driven growth at institutions like the Natural History Museum and the Ashmolean; and a hard look at the logistics that turn an encounter with prehistory into an exercise in queue management.

The broader heritage sector faces a punishing economic environment. ALVA described 2025 as financially the toughest year since the pandemic, compounded by increased employer National Insurance contributions and above-inflation minimum wage increases.11 English Heritage cannot control macroeconomic headwinds. But it can control what happens when someone arrives at its most famous site and asks whether the experience was worth the money. Right now, too many visitors are answering no.

The stones themselves remain extraordinary — 5,000 years of human ambition and mystery compressed into a circle of sarsen and bluestone on Salisbury Plain. The tragedy is not that Stonehenge has lost its power. It is that the organisation charged with sharing that power is letting it seep away, and taking the financial foundations of England’s wider heritage with it.

 

References

1. ALVA, ‘Visitor Figures 2025’, 20 March 2026. alva.org.uk/details.cfm?p=403&codeid=895.

2. Museums Association, ‘Natural History Museum breaks all-time record for visitor figures’, 20 March 2026.

3. English Heritage, ‘Reshaping English Heritage’, January 2025. english-heritage.org.uk/about/search-news/pr-reshaping-english-heritage.

4. Museum Observer, ‘English Heritage Plans 200 Redundancies and Winter Closures Amid Financial Struggles’, 2025.

5. Museums Association, ‘English Heritage workforce could shrink by 7% in major restructure’, 30 January 2025.

6. English Heritage Trust Board Meeting Minutes, 12 March 2025. english-heritage.org.uk/about/our-people/our-trustees/trustee-meeting-minutes.

7. English Heritage, Annual Report and Accounts 2024/25.

8. Tripadvisor reviews, Stonehenge Visitor Centre, September 2025; Adventure Brits, ‘Is Visiting Stonehenge A Megalithic Disappointment?’, June 2025.

9. English Heritage Stonehenge ticket prices 2025/26. english-heritage.org.uk; visitstonehenge.co.uk/en/tickets.

10. Girl Takes Mundo, ‘How To Visit Stonehenge For Free’, 9 February 2026.

11. Arts Professional, ‘Visitor attraction numbers see “modest” but “consistent” growth, ALVA finds’, 20 March 2026.

12. Mason, P. & Kuo, I-L. (2007) ‘Visitor Attitudes to Stonehenge: International Icon or National Disgrace?’, Journal of Heritage Tourism, 2(3), pp. 168–183.

13. Natural History Museum, ‘Record breaking 7.1m visitors make it UK’s most popular visitor attraction’, 20 March 2026. nhm.ac.uk.

14. Natural History Museum, ‘Over 5 Million Visitors to Gardens in First Year’, July 2025. nhm.ac.uk.

15. Wikipedia, ‘Stonehenge’, citing English Heritage announcement March 2025: planning permission for Learning Centre and Neolithic classroom, due autumn 2026.

16. Civil Society, ‘English Heritage proposes cutting at least 189 staff roles’, January 2025.

17. Prospect Union, ‘Prospect warns against proposed English Heritage redundancies’, 2024.

18. Artlyst, ‘Natural History Museum Breaks UK Records With 7.1 Million Visitors’, March 2026.

19. Statista / ALVA, ‘Number of visits to Stonehenge in England from 2010 to 2023’. Pre-pandemic peak c. 1.6m in 2019.

Friday, 27 March 2026

1576 Depiction of Stonehenge for sale

 



Wiltshire. Saxton (Christopher), Wiltoniae Comitatus (Herbida Planitie Nobilis) hic ob ovulus Proponitur, Anno. Dm. 1576, circa 1579, engraved map with contemporary hand-colouring and some later enhancement, large ornate strapwork cartouche and mileage scale, trimmed with slight loss to the horizontal strapwork margins, skillfully repaired and replaced in facsimile, the central fold strengthened and repaired on verso, the whole backed with archival paper, one repaired marginal closed tear, 420 x 480 mm, mounted  - https://www.dominicwinter.co.uk/Auction/Lot/lot-193---wiltshire-saxton-christopher-wiltoniae-comitatus-herbida-planitie-noblis-circa-1579/?lot=427042

One of the very earliest depictions of Stonehenge. 

16th Century: First Observational and Printed Depictions

  • c. 1573–1575: Watercolour by Flemish artist and poet Lucas de Heere (in his manuscript Corte Beschryvinghe van England, Scotland, ende Irland). Painted on site during his time in England; this is frequently called the earliest known realistic depiction based on direct observation, showing the stones in a more topographical, less mythical style. It captures the monument’s appearance before later collapses. Held in the British Library.
  • 1576 (published 1579): Christopher Saxton’s map of Wiltshire (Wiltoniae Comitatus herbida Planicie nobilis... Anno Dni 1576), part of his pioneering Atlas of the Counties of England and Wales. Features a small pictorial symbol labelled “The Stonadge” (an early spelling) north of Salisbury Plain. This is one of the earliest printed depictions on a map and the first systematic cartographic representation of the site. Later states/editions of the plate sometimes added a more detailed inset view of Stonehenge.

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Read the Reviews, Brian

Oh dear, Dr John is trying CPR on the corpse of the Glacial Theory again, this time by raising doubts about Clarke and Kirkland's Salisbury Plain River Sediment Study. 

Brian blog post from today https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2026/03/probable-bias-in-zircon-apatite.html 

The paper is at https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-03105-3 

Peer reviews at : https://static-content.springer.com/esm/art%3A10.1038%2Fs43247-025-03105-3/MediaObjects/43247_2025_3105_MOESM1_ESM.pdf

Even the toughest critic in the peer-review file — Reviewer #1 — hammered the exact point the blog post keeps circling: the dominant Laurentian zircon signature is exactly what you'd expect from the eroded Paleogene cover (Thanet Formation and London Basin strata) that once blanketed Salisbury Plain. That background signal is pre-Pleistocene recycling, not fresh glacial detritus. The authors kept the Stonehenge framing after revision, and the reviewers accepted it because the study's real punchline is the absence of anything extra on top of that baseline: no prominent Darriwilian (~464 Ma) Welsh peak, despite 550 grains analysed. One lone outlier doesn't save the glacial hypothesis; it underscores how clean the negative result is.

The specific methodological concerns raised in the blog post were already addressed in the peer review process — which would be apparent to anyone who had read the review file carefully. Working through the list:

  • Handpicking bias: The grains weren't handpicked. They were bulk-mounted into epoxy discs and randomly selected using automated TIMA mineralogy at Curtin's John de Laeter Centre. Reviewer 2 explicitly asked about recovery rates and grain selection; the authors provided automated mineralogy maps showing zircon and apatite abundance across all samples.
  • Sample size: Reviewer 1 raised exactly this concern, pointedly questioning whether four samples was sufficient for a Nature-family journal. The authors demonstrated that all four samples are statistically indistinguishable (KS test P>0.05), that 550 zircon and 250 apatite grains were analysed across four samples, with 401 concordant zircon ages forming the primary provenance dataset and that ~120 grains is the accepted threshold for statistically meaningful provenance interpretation. The inter-sample consistency across independent catchments is itself strong evidence the signal is real and regional.
  • Hydraulic sorting and grain size bias: The Frantz separator and heavy liquid separation steps are described in the methods. Reviewer 2 interrogated the recovery rates specifically. The authors' response — that the minerals are relatively abundant in the samples (zircon 1.5–56 wt%, apatite 3.5–13 wt%) — addresses the concern that a tiny exotic population might be dominating the signal.
  • The Paleogene cover issue: Most strikingly, the blog post misses the deepest challenge to the paper — one that Reviewer 1 raised so forcefully they initially declined to recommend publication. The Laurentian signal is entirely consistent with the former Paleogene cover, and that's actually the authors' own conclusion. The glacial framing survives not because the Laurentian signal is surprising, but because of what's absent from it.
  • The apatite evidence: The blog post doesn't mention the apatite data at all. The complete absence of old Laurentian apatite — despite its abundance in the Laurentian basement — is independent corroboration of deep, multi-cycle sedimentary recycling. As Reviewer 2 (Gary O'Sullivan, Trinity College Dublin) noted, it would be impossible to deliver old zircon via first-cycle glacial transport without also delivering old apatite. The zircon-poor Chalk makes this the ideal null detector, and the apatite result is a second, chemically independent line pointing the same way.

This paper isn't where the Glacial Theory dies — it's just the latest nail. The glacial hypothesis has been losing ground on multiple independent fronts for years.  That cumulative burden is where the argument is effectively over — this paper simply adds one more count to an already lengthy indictment.

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Stonehenge Reading Lists

Two leading UK archaeology modules for the 2025–26 academic year offer rich insights into the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age (c. 4000–1500 BC). Looking at their reading lists is revealing. The University of Reading’s AR3P20: Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Britain (34 items) takes a broad, seminar-driven approach, while University College London’s ARCL0078: The Age of Stonehenge (221 items) delivers an exhaustive, lecture-focused deep dive centred on Britain’s most iconic monument. Together, the lists reveal both shared foundations and contrasting teaching philosophies in prehistoric studies.

Comparing them side by side, several texts appear in both — and these are probably the closest thing to a consensus 'essential reading list' for anyone who wants to understand Stonehenge at an academic level:

         Parker Pearson, M. et al. — 'Resourcing Stonehenge: Patterns of Human, Animal and Goods Mobility in the Late Neolithic' (2016) — in both lists' Stonehenge/Wessex sections

         Brace et al. — 'Ancient Genomes Indicate Population Replacement in Early Neolithic Britain', Nature: Ecology & Evolution (2019)

         Fowler et al. — 'A High-Resolution Picture of Kinship Practices in an Early Neolithic Tomb', Nature (2022)

         Richards, C. — 'Henges and Water: Towards an Elemental Understanding of Monumentality and Landscape in Late Neolithic Britain', Journal of Material Culture (1996)

         Richards, C. — 'Monuments as Landscape: Creating the Centre of the World in Late Neolithic Orkney', World Archaeology

         Madgwick et al. — 'Multi-Isotope Analysis Reveals that Feasts in the Stonehenge Environs Drew People and Animals from Throughout Britain', Science Advances (2019)

         Cummings, V. — The Neolithic of Britain and Ireland (various editions)

         Thomas, J. — The Birth of Neolithic Britain (2013)

         Bradley, R. — The Prehistory of Britain and Ireland (various editions)


What This Means for the Interested Non-Specialist

University reading lists are one of the best-kept secrets for anyone who wants to go beyond the popular books. They're compiled by active researchers, updated annually, and — crucially — they distinguish between what's essential and what's merely recommended. The two lists together give a remarkably clear map of the field.

If you want to start somewhere, the Parker Pearson books are the obvious entry point — Stonehenge: Exploring the Greatest Stone Age Mystery (2012) for a readable overview, and Stonehenge: Making Sense of a Prehistoric Mystery (2015) for something more detailed. Richard Bradley's The Prehistory of Britain and Ireland provides the wider context. And if you want to push into the primary research literature, both Madgwick et al. (2019) on the Stonehenge feasts and the Brace et al. (2019) aDNA paper are genuinely accessible despite being academic articles.

 

The UCL reading list (ARCL0078) is publicly available at: https://rl.talis.com/3/ucl/lists/BCF639B2-A137-907A-94AF-8E71C1DB6E89.html

The University of Reading list (AR3P20) is publicly available at: https://rl.talis.com/3/ucl/lists/BCF639B2-A137-907A-94AF-8E71C1DB6E89.html

Saturday, 21 March 2026

The Meaden Cobble Source Identified

The Meaden Cobble -- a clast of dark-coloured Carboniferous Limestone, probably from one of the Black Rock Limestone outcrops in Somerset - Brian John

Dr John is very excited by a cobble discovered on the track from Gunsite Lane (or Road) to West Kennet Long Barrow. He is concocting possible sources and glacial modes of transport for it.

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2026/01/a-black-limestone-cobble-from-west.html

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-meaden-cobble-probably-from-somerset.html

https://brian-mountainman.blogspot.com/2026/03/avon-gorge-another-possible-source-for.html

As I pointed out it is just ubiquitous Mendip Limestone hardcore used on the farms of Wiltshire to make up tracks, gateways and yards since Victorian times 

I checked the eastern end of the lane and it has been made up with such cobbles:

Looking west on the cobble track, note Silbury Hill top right. 

To help in the search for the source of the cobble I have annotated his aerial photo with where to look, and I think we can be sure it was transported by agricultural machinery rather than a glacier.