Thursday, 4 June 2026

First Look at Clarke et al. (2026) – From Highlands to Henge

A refined provenancing study with a new statistical “best match”, but it still feels like identifying one possible needle in a very large and varied haystack.

Clarke, A. J. I., Veness, R. L. J., Kirkland, C. L., Clark, C. D., Gandy, N., Emery, A. et al. (2026) From Highlands to Henge: Refining the Provenance and Transport Pathways of Stonehenge's Altar Stone. Journal of Quaternary Science, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.70080


The paper uses Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests and MDS plots on the limited published detrital zircon datasets and finds the strongest match at Sarclet in Caithness (p = 0.96), with other northern mainland sites (Braemore, Kirtomy, Portskerra) also statistically compatible. More southerly Orcadian Basin and Grampian outlier samples fare worse. This is a genuine step forward from the 2024 basin-level result, yet the authors themselves stress that the Orcadian Basin is enormous (up to 10,000 km²) and lithologically heterogeneous, with only sparse published zircon coverage. So while Caithness now looks the most likely area among the data we have, it remains one plausible candidate among many unsampled possibilities.

On transport, the paper dismisses any direct Late Devensian glacial delivery to Salisbury Plain. Using time-integrated ice-flow modelling (Veness et al. 2025 method on BRITICE-CHRONO geometries), the favoured Caithness sources mostly disperse north and east; only specific sensitivity scenarios (or slightly more southerly seeds) allow material to reach as far as Dogger Bank.

The authors float an intriguing hybrid idea: glacial transport could have delivered the stone part-way to Dogger Bank (~400 km from Stonehenge), after which humans might have collected it and moved it the remaining distance, perhaps while the area was still accessible or as post-glacial sea-level rise began to inundate Doggerland. They note Dogger Bank was exposed dry land with moraines until roughly 8–7 ka BP.

However, several problems stand out even on a first reading:

  • No supporting evidence on the ground (or seabed): No other Altar Stone-like erratics or matching detrital signatures have been reported from Dogger Bank or the surrounding North Sea floor in the right context. The companion Clarke & Kirkland (2026) fingerprinting study found no glacial detrital zircon–apatite signal from northeast Scotland in Salisbury Plain sediments at all.
  • Timing difficulties: Any Dogger Bank staging post would require the stone to be removed and transported onward (or cached) across a gap of several millennia before erection at Stonehenge. The paper acknowledges this creates a complicated multi-stage history rather than a neat solution.
  • Modelling limitations: Ice-flow reconstructions are models, not direct observations. They have known issues reconciling with the actual geological record of erratic distributions in places, and the present simulation has relatively coarse spatial (2.5 km) and temporal (1,000-year) resolution. The authors are open about the high sensitivity to exact starting position near the former ice divide and that only the Devensian can be modelled usefully here.

Conclusion Even in its most favourable reading, this paper does not rescue a primarily glacial explanation. It narrows the likely source area statistically while showing that direct glacial transport to Wessex is not supported, and that even a partial glacial assist to Dogger Bank still leaves substantial anthropogenic transport necessary — plus extra chronological and logistical complications. The absence of corroborating erratics or detrital evidence further weakens the hybrid staging-post scenario.

On balance, the work inadvertently strengthens the case that Neolithic people organised and executed the long-distance movement of this 6-tonne block, whether from Caithness directly or via some intermediate location. It is a careful, data-driven paper, but it does not move the glacial needle very far. More targeted zircon sampling from the Caithness area and higher-resolution modelling (or new seabed data) would be needed before any Dogger Bank idea could be taken seriously.

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Investigating Robert Langdon’s Post-Glacial Flooding Hypothesis: A Data-Driven Look at the Stonehenge Landscape

Robert John Langdon’s The Post-Glacial Flooding Hypothesis (V3.0) proposes a radical reinterpretation of prehistoric Britain. He argues that massive post-Ice Age flooding and gradually falling river/groundwater levels shaped where ancient people built their monuments — with early sites consistently occupying the highest ground available at the time.

I decided to examine the claims at the heart of his theory.

Step 1: How to Convert the FlipHTML5 Book to PDF

The book is hosted as an online flipbook here: https://online.fliphtml5.com/mnzqa/orkc/

Recommended method (fast and effective):

  1. Go to https://fliphtml5.aivaded.com/
  2. Paste the book URL and click convert.
  3. Download the resulting PDF (in this case, a 148 MB, 355-page file).

Alternative options include browser extensions like “FLIPHTML5 to PDF Downloader” or using your browser’s Print → Save as PDF function. Once you have the PDF, run OCR (using Adobe Acrobat, Smallpdf, or OCRmyPDF) to make the text searchable.

Here we start reviewing the text and then the the two most important Appendices, see belopw.


The Preface: Langdon’s Origin Story

Here is the opening of the New Scientific Edition:


OCRed: Preface to the New Scientific Edition

The Post-Glacial Flooding Hypothesis was not developed from theory, but rather from fieldwork. The study began with a survey of fifty archaeological sites surrounding Stonehenge. When their elevations were plotted against age, a striking pattern emerged: the earliest sites consistently occupied the top percentile of the local height distribution, while younger sites increasingly appeared on lower ground. No early site sat in the valley floor.

The implication was clear. If the oldest activity clustered only at the highest levels available in that landscape, and later activity spread downslope over time, then something other than simple preference was at work. The most economical explanation was hydrological: prehistoric rivers and groundwater levels in this region had once been significantly higher than today and had progressively fallen, exposing new terrain for use.

 

This elevation-vs-age pattern is the foundational observation for Langdon’s entire hypothesis.

The Problem: Where Are the 50 Sites?

Despite repeated claims throughout the book and on his website (prehistoric-britain.co.uk), Langdon does not appear to publish the actual list of the 50 sites, their exact elevations, or the raw data behind the claimed correlation.

After extensive searching of peer-reviewed literature, English Heritage reports, and archaeological databases, no independent replication of this specific 50-site dataset could be found.

Our Independent Analysis

I compiled the best publicly available data for well-documented sites in the Stonehenge landscape (within the immediate World Heritage area). Here is the dataset used:

Data Table: Stonehenge Area Sites

SiteElevation (m ASL)Oldest Date (BP)
Stonehenge Mesolithic1029750
Blick Mead809750
Robin Hood's Ball1405550
Stonehenge Cursus1105450
Durrington Walls1004550
Woodhenge1054400
Normanton Down Barrows1054100

Visual Analysis: Elevation vs Age


Key findings from the analysis:

  • Pearson correlation coefficient: -0.447 (weak negative correlation)
  • Older sites do not consistently occupy the highest elevations.
  • While many monumental sites prefer higher, visible ridges (a well-known pattern in British prehistory), the data does not show the strong, systematic “top percentile → progressive downslope migration” described by Langdon.
  • Early Mesolithic activity (e.g. Blick Mead) occurs at both low and mid elevations, often near water sources.

Conclusion: 

Langdon makes great play of using AI to write and validate his reports — he has even published pieces titled “AI now supports my Post-Glacial Flooding Hypothesis.” It therefore seemed only right to get an AI (Grok) to question the work in return.

Having analysed only the first two paragraphs of the preface, a fundamental problem has already emerged: no data, no replication, and no firm foundation for the central empirical claim that supposedly underpins the entire hypothesis.

Is it worth diving any further in?

At this stage, the honest answer is probably not for a detailed chapter-by-chapter review. Without the raw 50-site dataset being made public, the hypothesis rests on an unverified foundation. While independent research and bold alternative ideas should always be welcomed, extraordinary claims require extraordinary (and transparent) evidence.

The preference for higher ground in prehistoric Britain is real — but mainstream archaeology explains it through visibility, symbolism, and practical drainage rather than dramatic hydrological shifts on the scale proposed.

This exercise demonstrates both the strengths and limitations of citizen scholarship in the age of AI. It’s easy to generate compelling narratives — much harder to provide the verifiable data that allows genuine scientific scrutiny.

PS - I asked his AI bot if the 50 sites and the data was in the book, just in case I had missed it.







Review of Appendix A: Stonehenge Borehole Data From The Post-Glacial Flooding Hypothesis by Robert John Langdon

Overall Assessment

This is not a credible borehole analysis. It is a highly selective, systematically over-interpreted presentation of standard geotechnical logs from the Stonehenge area, forced into a preconceived narrative of a "long-lived post-glacial flooded landscape" with a persistent high water table up to ~110 m OD.

The fundamental problem is interpretation bias on an industrial scale. Almost every common feature in chalk boreholes — solution pipes, reworked flint, chalk paste, minor gravels, occasional shells, staining — is reclassified as "post-glacial water activity" evidence. Normal periglacial, solifluction, and groundwater processes are dismissed or ignored. The statistical treatment is amateurish, and the conclusions vastly exceed what the raw data can support.

Major Methodological Flaws

  1. Lack of Context and Controls No comparison is made with regional chalk borehole datasets outside the immediate Stonehenge Bottom. Similar "water-related" features (chalk paste, solution features, flint gravel, organic staining) appear routinely in dry upland chalk sites across Wiltshire, Hampshire, and Dorset due to:
    • Pleistocene periglacial disturbance (cryoturbation, solifluction)
    • Holocene soil processes and tree throw
    • Modern/perched groundwater and seasonal fluctuation
    • Reworked Cretaceous fossils
  2. Arbitrary Classification The author’s "water-related horizons" matrix is subjective to the point of meaninglessness. Zero-depth entries, thin bands, and solution features are counted as independent "events" to inflate numbers (e.g., 133 "horizons" in R18). This is not rigorous stratigraphy — it is counting artefacts of logging style and natural chalk heterogeneity.
  3. The 92.6 m OD "Pole Height" Obsession Claiming convergence at 92.6 m OD across a few boreholes as proof of a stable water surface is geologically naive. Local topographic variation, different ground levels, and borehole spacing make such precise "convergence" expected by chance in any dataset. Shells at that elevation are almost certainly reworked Cretaceous material common in the area.
  4. Over-interpretation of Individual Boreholes
    • R18 (SU14SW62): 18% water-affected is unremarkable for chalk in a valley setting. High event count reflects detailed logging of natural variation, not repeated flooding.
    • P2 (SU14SW25): 51% affected is high, but in a low-lying basin with obvious solutional history — entirely consistent with long-term groundwater circulation, not surface flooding.
    • R132 & R172: Near-total saturation at high and low elevations is classic for chalk solution pipes and karstic weathering, not evidence of a 100m+ deep lake.
    • Shells and organics are treated as exotic "flood indicators." In reality, they are frequently encountered in chalk sequences and require careful taphonomic analysis (which is absent here).
  5. Missing Professional Standards
    • No proper stratigraphic correlation diagrams or fence sections.
    • No dating of the "events" (radiocarbon, OSL, etc.).
    • No sedimentological descriptions beyond crude material categories.
    • No consideration of contamination, drilling artefacts, or logging inconsistencies between boreholes.
    • Zero engagement with peer-reviewed work on Stonehenge’s geomorphology (e.g., studies from the Stonehenge Riverside Project or BGS mapping).

Scientific Context

In chalk landscapes, elevated groundwater and solution features during the early Holocene are expected due to climate shifts and isostatic adjustment — but not on the scale or in the manner claimed. Mainstream Quaternary science shows the Stonehenge landscape was predominantly dry chalk downland with localised wetlands and streams during the Mesolithic/Neolithic, not a vast fluctuating inland sea reaching 30–40 m above modern river levels.

Langdon’s data actually shows vertical continuity of processes — which is normal for karstic chalk — but he misreads it as evidence of dramatic surface flooding.

Verdict

This appendix is pseudoscientific special pleading. It takes routine geotechnical observations that any experienced chalk engineer would recognise as normal background noise and inflates them into "proof" of a radical hypothesis. The methodology would not pass peer review in any respectable journal, nor would it survive scrutiny on a major infrastructure project.




Review of Appendix C: Mathematical Proofs and Derived Curves From The Post-Glacial Flooding Hypothesis by Robert John Langdon

Overall Assessment

This appendix is not a rigorous mathematical proof. It is a selective compilation of simplified equations, cherry-picked parameters, and curve-fitting exercises dressed up in the language of geophysics. While it gestures toward standard concepts in Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) and sea-level science, it repeatedly misapplies them, introduces unjustified simplifications, and reaches conclusions that far exceed what the mathematics actually supports.

The work shows superficial familiarity with the literature (citing Peltier, Lambeck, Bradley, Shennan, etc.) but demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of how these models are constructed, constrained, and validated in professional practice. It is characteristic of self-published "research" that borrows credibility from real science without submitting to its standards.

Specific Criticisms

1. Mass-Balance of Ice and Sea Water (C.2.1) This section is basically correct in the global eustatic conversion factor (~4.06 × 10^5 km³ ice per metre sea-level equivalent). This is standard textbook material. No major issue here, though it is presented as if it were a novel derivation.

2. Isostatic Flexure and Visco-Elastic Relaxation (C.2.2–C.2.3) The flexure equation and relaxation terms are standard, but the implementation is crude:

  • Flexural rigidity D = 1 × 10²³ N m and mantle viscosity η = 1 × 10²¹ Pa s are plugged in as fixed values without proper justification or sensitivity testing for Britain.
  • The two-layer relaxation times (T1 = 1.5 ka, T2 = 4.5 ka) are loosely referenced to Bradley (2011) but oversimplified. Real GIA models (ICE-6G_C, etc.) use depth-dependent viscosity profiles and solve the full sea-level equation with self-gravitation, rotational feedback, and ocean loading — none of which appear here.

This is not finite-element modelling as claimed; it is back-of-the-envelope curve matching.

3. Hydrological Coupling and "Base-Level Equation" (C.3) Here the appendix collapses into speculation.

  • The arbitrary hydrological adjustment H(t) = k1ΔS + k2ΔQ with ad-hoc constants (k1 ≈ 0.05 m/km³) has no basis in peer-reviewed hydrology or geomorphology. River base-level response to isostasy is far more complex, involving sediment transport thresholds, channel incision/aggradation feedbacks, and climate-driven discharge variations.
  • The "differential tilt" calculation (2.43 × 10^{-5}) and resulting slope changes are plausible in order of magnitude for Britain but are presented as precise and universally applicable. Real differential uplift in Britain is well-documented (north rising, south subsiding), but the rates and implications for river terraces are not as straightforward as claimed.

4. Derived Curves and "Hydrological Calibration Curve" (C.4) The "national calibration function" — Elevation = 10.5 + 0.08 × P (km from The Wash) with R² = 0.97 — is the most egregious example of overfitting.

  • Claiming ±1 m predictive accuracy for terrace/peat altitudes across Britain is absurd. Real GIA models have uncertainties of several metres, especially when incorporating local compaction, sediment loading, and tidal range variations.
  • The "damped oscillator" for base-level and peat compaction models are toy equations, not validated against the full suite of British relative sea-level (RSL) index points (Shennan et al. have compiled >2100 such points).

5. Sensitivity Analysis (C.5) Extremely limited. Testing only narrow ranges and claiming total uncertainty of ±1.7 m is not credible. Professional GIA studies (Bradley, Peltier, Lambeck groups) routinely explore much broader parameter spaces and still report multi-metre uncertainties, especially for the British Isles where the ice load history remains debated.

6. Interpretation and Plain Language Recap (C.6–C.7) The claim of "mathematical closure" and predictive power is scientifically irresponsible. The model does not explain observed terrace and peat altitudes as claimed, because it ignores or downplays key processes (e.g., sediment supply changes, autogenic fluvial behaviour, and the fact that post-glacial rivers in Britain show complex responses not dominated by the author's "falling groundwater" narrative).

Broader Issues

  • Lack of transparency: No full model code, no raw input datasets, no proper validation against independent RSL databases.
  • Misuse of citations: References to high-quality papers (Peltier, Lambeck, Bradley, Shennan) are used to lend authority, but the actual implementations deviate significantly from those works.
  • Pseudoscientific framing: Presenting this as "proof" that underpins a radical flooding hypothesis is classic overreach. The core 50-sites elevation claim remains unverified, and this appendix does nothing to rescue it.

Verdict: This is not university-level mathematics or geomorphology. It is amateur curve-fitting masquerading as rigorous modelling. A first-year postgraduate student submitting this as a methods chapter would fail. It cherry-picks parameters, oversimplifies complex coupled systems, and vastly overstates predictive power.

In the context of the broader book — which already fails at the preface due to the absent 50-site dataset — this appendix provides no salvage. It is not worth further investment of serious analytical time.

The hypothesis requires transparent, peer-reviewable data and modelling, not this.




BREATHTAKING OPPORTUNITY: Become the HEAD OF STONEHENGE



English Heritage is looking for a bold, visionary leader to take charge of one of the most famous and awe-inspiring places on the planet.


This isn’t just any leadership role — it’s your chance to **run Stonehenge**. To protect its ancient magic, deliver world-class visitor experiences for millions, and drive ambitious commercial success across operations, retail, and hospitality.


But here’s what makes this role truly special:


We’re looking for an **inclusive and influential leader** who thrives on building collaborative, empowering cultures. Someone who naturally connects with diverse teams, audiences, partners, and stakeholders. At English Heritage, **everybody’s welcome** — and we mean it. We’re deeply committed to being an equitable, diverse, and inclusive organisation. You’ll have the chance to champion this through our active EDI networks covering Ethnic Diversity, LGBTQ+, Disability, Neurodivergence, Faith & Belief, Social Equity, and more.


As Head of Stonehenge you’ll:

- Lead a large, passionate team with real heart and purpose

- Shape the site’s long-term strategy while smashing revenue targets

- Mastermind unforgettable moments — from solstice gatherings to groundbreaking events

- Represent this iconic World Heritage Site locally, nationally, and globally


If you’re a commercially sharp, operationally excellent leader who leads with **inclusion, empowerment, and innovation**, this is your stage.


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Closing date: **21 June 2026**


https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/about/our-people/careers-with-us/job-search/default-job-page/?jobRef=16449


#Stonehenge #Leadership #InclusiveLeadership #EDI #HeritageCareers #EnglishHeritage

Tuesday, 2 June 2026

New Tools on sarsen.org: Fact Checker, Second Reviewer & Site Search

I’ve added three new tools to help with reading and research on sarsen.org. They’re designed to make it easier to evaluate claims, review papers and drafts, and find relevant content from the site.

All three open Grok in a new tab and apply consistent standards — prioritising peer-reviewed evidence and applying careful scrutiny to weaker claims.

Archaeological Fact Checker

This tool helps assess the strength of individual claims. Paste a URL or short excerpt and it returns a structured analysis, clearly distinguishing between peer-reviewed sources, academic consensus, and single-author assertions.

It works best with focused claims or short passages.

Archaeological Fact Checker
Best with a URL or short excerpt / key claims. Keep it concise.
0 / 3200

Second Reviewer

This tool is designed for reviewing papers or drafts. Paste a short excerpt for a quick structured review, or use the full document option to upload a PDF or longer text directly into Grok (recommended for complete papers).

Second Reviewer
For papers and drafts
Quick review – short excerpts only
Full document review (recommended)
Best for complete papers and drafts

Search sarsen.org

A site-focused search that surfaces the most relevant posts from sarsen.org, along with context from the wider archaeological literature.

Search sarsen.org
Find relevant posts on the site

These tools are now available in the sidebar. They are intended as practical aids to support careful reading and research. I hope you find them useful.

Sunday, 31 May 2026

Tracing the route of the Sarsens to Stonehenge - The video

In the Footsteps of the Ancestors | Stonehenge Access All Areas Ep 3 

Two Boulders Fewer: North Devon’s Erratics Now Point to Ice Rafting, Not Override

How the re-reading of the Shebbear stone and the Ramson Cliff boulder removes the high-level evidence for Irish Sea ice on the North Devon cliffs — and what is left standing once they are gone.

The Shebbear Sarsen

The Ramson Cliff Erratic

For the better part of two centuries the erratic boulders of the North Devon coast have been read as evidence that ice once reached, and in places rode over, this shore. Two stones carried more of that argument than the rest: the Devil’s Stone at Shebbear, and the block at Ramson Cliff on Baggy Point, sitting at about 80 m above Ordnance Datum. Both have now been looked at again. Neither survives the examination as a far-travelled glacial erratic. With them set aside, the North Devon record is a good deal more uniform than the textbooks allow, and the explanation that fits it best is not an overriding ice sheet but ice rafting onto a shore platform standing under a high relative sea level.

How we got here

The story begins in 1837, with the first report of a large non-local boulder at the foot of the Saunton cliffs. It belongs to a wider Victorian preoccupation. When the Boulder Committees were set up — the Scottish committee in 1871, the British Association committee reporting annually from 1873 to 1914 — the question they were chartered to settle was precisely ours: were the erratics of Britain and Ireland dropped from floating ice, or dragged by grounded glaciers? By the end of the century the answer for the country at large had gone to grounded ice, and that has remained the default reading of an erratic ever since.

The South West was always the awkward exception. The early catalogues — Prestwich (1892), Worth (1898), Ussher (1904), Reid and Scrivenor (1906), Reid (1907), and for North Devon’s igneous material Dewey (1910) — described foreign blocks strung along coasts and dredged from the sea floor, including the boulders Hunt recovered from the Salcombe fishing grounds well out in the Channel and the Giant’s Rock at Porthleven (Flett and Hill, 1912). A great many of these stones lie south and east of any limit a British or Irish ice sheet has ever been shown to reach. For those, grounded ice is not on the table; floating ice is the only carrier left. Rafting, in other words, is not a hypothesis in the South West but a demonstrated fact — the only open question has been how far its reach extends.

North Devon sat closer to the supposed ice, and so the older argument ran hotter there. Taylor (1956, 1958) catalogued the Saunton and Fremington erratics; the interpretation then split. Mitchell (1960, 1965) and Kidson (1971, 1977; Kidson et al., 1977) read the giant coastal blocks as the work of a regional ice sheet, generally placed in the Anglian or earlier. Stephens (1966, 1970, 1974) read them as rafted, and his positive argument is the one that has worn best: the largest erratics are confined to a narrow coastal band below about 9 m OD, within reach of present storm waves — a strange, selective distribution for an ice sheet that supposedly buried the ground, and exactly what one would expect of stones grounded out of floating ice at a former shoreline.

Into that argument came a wrinkle. Every North Devon erratic on record up to 1969 lay at the base of the cliffs. The block found afterwards on top of Baggy Point, at roughly 80 m OD, was first noted by Madgett & Madgett (1974) and formally described (as part of the full Saunton–Croyde erratic suite) by Madgett & Inglis (1987), did not fit. It became the high-level evidence: the one stone that seemed to require ice standing well above the present coast, riding over the headland rather than lapping its foot. The Devil’s Stone at Shebbear, higher still and inland, was pressed into the same service. Between them they propped up the reading that North Devon had been overrun, not merely fringed, by Irish Sea ice.

The standard synthesis, Campbell et al. (1998) in the Quaternary of South-West England volume of the Geological Conservation Review, left the ice-sheet-versus-rafting question formally open. The Fremington context was filled in by Croot et al. (1996), and the regional ceiling for independent ice was fixed by Evans et al. (2012), who identified the Dartmoor ice cap as the southernmost independent Pleistocene ice cap in the British Isles. Then the marine record tightened the limits hard. The BRITICE–CHRONO programme — Smedley et al. (2017), Scourse et al. (2021), Clark et al. (2022) — showed that the last Irish Sea Ice Stream pushed all the way to the Celtic Sea shelf break, but that its southernmost terrestrial ice stood on the Isles of Scilly at about 25 ka. Scilly is to the west; North Devon lies east of it, tucked into the inner Bristol Channel. And Scourse et al. (2024) supplied the missing mechanism for the low coastal erratics: early in the last cold stage a steep, ice-loaded crust held relative sea level high enough, while calving margins still existed, for ice to raft material onto southern shore platforms during Marine Isotope Stages 4 and 3. For the first time there was a dated, physical route by which the Saunton and Croyde blocks could have arrived where they sit, without an ice sheet ever touching them.

The two boulders, looked at again

The Shebbear stone is the simpler case. Read as a local silcrete — a sarsen, sitting on or close to its parent duricrust — it is not a travelled stone at all. It records the survival of a hard cap, not the passage of ice, and it never had any business in a discussion of transport mechanisms. A boulder that has gone nowhere tells you nothing about how far ice came.

Ramson Cliff is the consequential one, because it was the stone that seemed to demand grounded ice high above the coast. In A review of the Ramson Cliff erratic: evidence of high-level ice flow? (Quaternary Newsletter 167, 2026), Rob Ixer, Paul Madgett — one of those who recorded the block in the first place — and I went back to the original thin section and the archival record. The petrography is fully compatible with the altered greenstones of the Cornubian metamorphic aureole, and carries none of the diagnostic Scottish or Welsh minerals that a far-travelled provenance would require. The block has no documentary existence before 1969: no map, no photograph. It was first noticed standing upright in pasture. It shows none of the abrasion a marine or shore-platform history would leave. And it is the only claimed high-level erratic on the entire south Bristol Channel coast — a population of one, at an anomalous height, pointing nowhere distant.

An angular block of local greenstone, standing upright, unworn, undocumented before living memory, alone at its elevation. On the balance of the evidence that is a manuported stone, not a glacial one; and its value as proof of high-level ice should be reassessed accordingly.

What this changes

Take Shebbear and Ramson Cliff out of the account and a plain fact emerges: there is no longer any demonstrated far-travelled boulder above the coastal zone in North Devon. The genuinely foreign material — the Saunton “pink granite”, the granulite gneiss at Freshwater Gut, and the petrographically interesting coastal clasts such as Taylor’s No. 7 with its apparent Irish Sea affinities — is all low. All of it sits on or about the shore platform and the raised beach, in the narrow band below storm-wave reach.

That is, to the letter, the distribution Stephens flagged half a century ago, now stripped of the high-level counter-examples that always sat awkwardly beside it. It is also exactly what the glacio-isostatic, high-sea-level rafting model of Scourse et al. (2024) predicts. And it leaves nothing on the headlands to require a thick ice sheet riding over them.

The argument therefore reframes. The live alternative to rafting is no longer “grounded ice at 80 m” — that reading has lost the only stones that supported it — but the far more modest “low-level grounded ice reaching about the present coastline.” That remains geographically admissible for North Devon in a way it never was for the south coast, where the erratics lie wholly beyond any reconstructed ice limit and rafting is effectively compelled. A single boulder resting on a shore platform is genuinely hard to assign between a grounded margin standing at the coast and ice that floated there. But three things now tilt the balance toward rafting: the distribution is the wrong shape for an overriding sheet; there is a dated mechanism for rafting onto a high shore platform; and the absence of any surviving high-level erratic is itself an argument that no thick ice overrode these cliffs.

What it does not change

This is the better-supported position, not the agreed one. Bennett et al. (2024), in their recent review of Devon’s Quaternary, (published before the re-examination reported here), restated the glacial reading, and the matter is not closed. Nor does any of it disprove glaciation in North Devon; it removes two pieces of evidence that were doing more work than they could bear. If there is a moral, it is a dull methodological one that cuts in every direction: a single anomalous boulder is a poor foundation for an ice sheet. The Ramson Cliff block was carrying an ice margin on its back. It turns out to have been carried there by people.

The North Devon erratics are best read not as the wreckage of an ice sheet that climbed the cliffs, but as the marine signature of a high relative sea level with calving ice somewhere offshore. The two stones that seemed to say otherwise were, on inspection, saying something else entirely — one a local stone that never moved, the other a stone that moved, but not by ice.


References

Bennett, J.A., Cullingford, R.A., Gibbard, P.L., Hughes, P.D. & Murton, J.B. (2024). The Quaternary Geology of Devon. Proceedings of the Ussher Society 15, 84–130.

Campbell, S., et al. (1998). Quaternary of South-West England. Geological Conservation Review Series, No. 14. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Peterborough.

Clark, C.D., et al. (2022). Growth and retreat of the last British–Irish Ice Sheet, 31 000 to 15 000 years ago: the BRITICE–CHRONO reconstruction. Boreas 51. https://doi.org/10.1111/bor.12594

Croot, D.G., Gilbert, A., Griffiths, J. & van der Meer, J.J. (1996). The character, age and depositional environments of the Fremington Clay Series, North Devon. Quaternary Newsletter 80: 1–15.

Daw, T., Ixer, R. & Madgett, P. (2026). A review of the Ramson Cliff erratic: evidence of high-level ice flow? Quaternary Newsletter 167: 13–19. https://doi.org/10.64926/qn.20517

Dewey, H. (1910). Notes on some igneous rocks from North Devon. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association 21(4): 429–434.

Evans, D.J.A., Harrison, S., Vieli, A. & Anderson, E. (2012). The glaciation of Dartmoor: the southernmost independent Pleistocene ice cap in the British Isles. Quaternary Science Reviews 45.

Madgett, P. & Madgett, R. (1974). High level erratic on Baggy Point. Quaternary Newsletter 14: 1–2.

Madgett, P.A. & Inglis, A.E. (1987). A re-appraisal of the erratic suite of the Saunton and Croyde areas, North Devon. Transactions of the Devonshire Association 119: 135–144.

Scourse, J.D., et al. (2021). Maximum extent and readvance dynamics of the Irish Sea Ice Stream and Irish Sea Glacier since the Last Glacial Maximum. Journal of Quaternary Science 36. https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.3313

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