Thursday, 22 January 2026

Absence of Evidence Can Be Evidence of Absence

 The phrase "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" has long served as a caution against premature conclusions from inadequate searches. Popularised by Carl Sagan and others, it rightly warns against appeals to ignorance in contexts where detection methods are weak. Yet it is frequently misused as a rhetorical shield, allowing midwits to evade judgement and perch indefinitely on the fence. In a Bayesian framework, absence of evidence is evidence of absence to the precise degree that evidence would have been expected had the claim been true.

Bayes' theorem formalises this: the posterior odds of a hypothesis given no observed evidence equal the prior odds multiplied by the likelihood ratio, P(H|~E) / P(~H|~E) = [P(~E|H) / P(~E|~H)] × prior odds. When a thorough search would almost certainly have detected evidence if the hypothesis held (low P(~E|H)), while absence is expected under the alternative (P(~E|~H) ≈ 1), the lack of evidence substantially weakens the hypothesis. The update's strength hinges on the test's sensitivity and statistical power. An insensitive or absent search yields mere absence of evidence; a high-powered one constitutes genuine evidence of absence.

This principle underpins the scientific method. Hypotheses must generate testable, falsifiable predictions (per Popper), while statistical tools—power analysis, confidence intervals, Bayes factors and equivalence testing—determine when a null result supports absence of an effect. Underpowered studies cannot prove "no effect," a common error highlighted by Altman and Bland; well-designed trials excluding meaningful effects do provide evidence of absence.

The slogan has devolved into intellectual laziness, protecting extraordinary claims, ineffective treatments and flimsy excuses from scrutiny. Science does not treat missing data as neutral. It requires updating beliefs in proportion to the available evidence and its absence, calibrated by prior probability, detection sensitivity, and statistical power. Absolutist slogans are not epistemology; they are evasions.

In practice, absence often functions as evidence precisely because evidence should exist.

Consider everyday excuses. Someone claims there was a “massive traffic jam,” yet live navigation apps show free-flowing roads, traffic cameras are clear, and no alerts appear on local feeds. Where corroboration should be abundant, its complete absence becomes informative—it strongly suggests the jam never existed.

Or take the classic “the dog ate my homework.” The paper is pristine. The dog is healthy. There are no vet visits, no torn scraps, no mess. When an event would almost certainly leave traces, the lack of any trace is itself powerful evidence against the claim.

The same reasoning governs serious domains. In court, an alibi of being “home alone all night” is not supported by silence when silence is unexpected. Phone metadata, utility usage, CCTV, transit records, and location pings normally generate footprints. When multiple independent systems—each sensitive enough to detect presence—produce nothing, that absence meaningfully updates beliefs against the alibi.

Scientific history offers parallels. The 1887 Michelson-Morley experiment detected no ether-induced variation in light speed despite sensitive apparatus where drift should appear; the null result provided decisive evidence of absence, advancing relativity. Modern drug trials demonstrate the point: high-powered Phase III studies showing no serious side effects (where detectable) support safety, while large RCTs with confidence intervals ruling out clinically meaningful benefits evidence ineffectiveness.

The phrase retains validity where detection is genuinely limited—such as current spectroscopy for biosignatures on distant exoplanets, or early hunts for rare phenomena—reflecting technological constraints rather than disproof.

Rigour demands rejecting both credulity and blanket scepticism. The scientific method equips us to assess when absence is probative: formulate predictions, test with adequate power, and update via likelihoods. In Bayesian terms, we routinely judge evidence of absence statistically. Midwits embrace ambiguity; truth-seekers calibrate the update and act. The slogan has its niche, but indiscriminate use excuses bad faith and stalls progress. Prioritise evidence quality and expectations over comforting fence-sitting.

Appendix 1: Glacial Transport of Bluestones to Stonehenge – When Absence Constitutes Compelling Evidence


The principle that absence of evidence can constitute evidence of absence applies powerfully to long-running debates in archaeology and geology. One prominent example is the claim that Pleistocene glaciers transported the bluestones of Stonehenge from the Preseli Hills in west Wales (approximately 225–240 km distant) to Salisbury Plain. Popularised by geologist Brian John, this hypothesis posits that Irish Sea ice streams carried the stones (mainly spotted dolerites, rhyolites and other lithologies) as erratics, depositing them locally for later Neolithic use. Proponents argue it explains the stones' distant origin without invoking implausible human effort.

In a Bayesian sense, this claim generates clear, testable predictions. If glaciers transported specific bluestone lithologies over such distances to a precise location, we should expect observable traces: glacial till or diamicton containing bluestone fragments; scattered erratics of matching petrography and geochemistry along plausible ice-flow paths (e.g., via the Bristol Channel); moraines, striations or landforms consistent with ice advance from north Pembrokeshire across southern Britain; and a broader erratic train reflecting unsorted glacial deposition rather than highly selective clustering at one site.

Yet the record shows comprehensive absence. No in-situ glacial deposits or till occur on Salisbury Plain; Pleistocene river gravels draining the area contain no bluestone erratics; no matching erratic train has been identified between Preseli and Stonehenge despite decades of fieldwork; and ice-sheet models indicate the Irish Sea Ice Stream did not extend far enough south or follow a path delivering these specific stones to the monument site. The lithological assemblage at Stonehenge is restricted to a dozen or so rock types with precise geochemical matches to discrete Welsh outcrops (e.g., Craig Rhos-y-Felin rhyolite, Carn Goedog dolerite), inconsistent with the random scatter expected from glaciation.

The most decisive recent evidence comes from detrital zircon–apatite fingerprinting of river sands near Stonehenge (Curtin University / Nature Communications Earth & Environment, January 2026). Analysis of over 500 zircon and apatite grains revealed no mineral signatures diagnostic of Welsh or Scottish glacial sources. Glaciers never reached the area; the absence of expected glacial mineral grains in thoroughly sampled sediments rules out ice delivery and supports deliberate human selection and transport.

Radiocarbon-dated quarrying evidence at Preseli sites (c. 3400–2900 BCE), stone tools, wedges and parallels with other Neolithic long-distance movements (e.g., sarsens from West Woods, Altar Stone from the Orcadian Basin) align with human agency. The glacial hypothesis, lacking empirical support and contradicted by high-powered negative results, has been effectively falsified. Its persistence despite the absence of expected traces exemplifies how the slogan "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" is misapplied when searches are thorough and predictions specific. In this case, the evidence of absence is strong and probative: the bluestones arrived at Stonehenge through human endeavour, not ice.


Appendix 2: Glacial Transport of Bluestones to Stonehenge - How the Evidence Against Glacial Transport of Stonehenge’s Bluestones Builds Up Step by Step

Imagine you start with an open mind about whether glaciers moved the bluestones 225 km from the Preseli Hills in Wales to Stonehenge. You begin with a fair starting belief — a prior probability of 20% (or 1 in 5) that glaciers did the job. This is generous: ice did reach parts of the Bristol Channel region long ago, but the idea that it neatly delivered exactly these stones to one spot has always been a minority view.

We will now update this belief one piece of evidence at a time. Each new finding is independent and comes from careful fieldwork, mapping, or lab analysis. For each, we ask: “How likely is it that we would see this complete lack of glacial traces if the glacier hypothesis were true?” (Usually quite low.) And “How likely is this absence if humans moved the stones instead?” (Very high.) Each time, the probability of glacial transport drops. The actual calculations are below.

Starting point Probability glaciers transported the bluestones: 20%

Evidence 1: No glacial till (sticky clay-like deposit) or bluestone fragments found on Salisbury Plain despite many boreholes and surveys If glaciers had dropped the stones here, we should see layers of glacial debris mixed with stone fragments. None appear. This halves our belief. Updated probability: 9.3% (why not 10%? - see below for the Baysian calculation)

Evidence 2: No bluestone fragments in ancient river gravels or along possible ice-flow routes Glaciers scatter debris widely into rivers and valleys. Extensive gravel mapping found nothing matching the bluestones. Updated probability: 4.5%

Evidence 3: No trail of erratics (scattered boulders), moraines (ridged debris), or bedrock scratches linking Preseli to Stonehenge A 225 km journey by ice should leave a visible “breadcrumb trail” across the landscape. Decades of searching found none. Updated probability: 2.3%

Evidence 4: Modern ice-sheet computer models (including the major BRITICE-CHRONO project) show the Irish Sea ice did not reach far enough south or follow the path needed to deliver these exact stones The models are based on extensive data about past ice movement. They rule out the required route. Updated probability: 1.4%

Evidence 5: The “Newall boulder” once thought to be a glacial erratic was re-examined with modern lab techniques (petrography, electron microscopy, and portable X-ray analysis) It turned out to be a broken piece of a Preseli bluestone with no signs of ice grinding or transport scratches. Updated probability: 1.0%

Evidence 6: The decisive 2026 study — analysis of more than 500 tiny zircon and apatite mineral grains from river sediments right beside Stonehenge These durable minerals act like fingerprints. If glaciers had brought Welsh material, their signatures would appear in the sediments. None were found. Analysing hundreds of grains makes it extremely unlikely the signal would be missed if glaciers had been involved. Final probability: 0.13% (roughly 1 in 770)

Overall picture After all six independent lines of negative evidence, the chance that glaciers moved the bluestones collapses to about 0.13% — effectively ruled out. The combined effect is like multiplying six separate “this is unlikely if glaciers did it” factors together. Even though early absences cause the biggest drops, the final mineral study delivers the knockout blow.

What if we change the starting assumptions? (Sensitivity check) Even if you begin much more optimistic (50% prior) or treat each absence as less decisive, the final probability rarely rises above a few percent. For example:

  • Starting at 50% and treating every absence as only mildly surprising → final ≈ 5% at most
  • Realistic starting belief and careful likelihoods → stays well under 1%

Simple takeaway Start reasonably open-minded. Add up the missing evidence, piece by piece. Each gap where something should have been found chips away at the glacier idea. By the end, the total weight of absences — from landscape features to microscopic minerals — makes glacial transport vanishingly unlikely. This is how we turn “absence of evidence” into strong evidence of absence when the search is thorough and the predictions are clear.

Sequential Bayesian Updating: How Each Line of Evidence Affects the Odds

We update the probability of glacial transport (H) step by step. Each piece of evidence is treated separately in logical order. We start with a generous prior probability P(H) = 0.20 (odds 0.25 : 1).

For each absence of evidence (~Ei), we assign:

  • P(~Ei | H): the probability of missing that specific trace if glaciers had transported the bluestones (kept relatively generous).
  • P(~Ei | ~H): the probability of observing this absence if humans transported the stones (very high).
  • Likelihood ratio (LR) = P(~Ei | H) / P(~Ei | ~H) — always < 1, reducing the odds of H.

The new posterior becomes the prior for the next step.

Prior: P(H) = 0.2000 (20%) Odds (H : ~H) = 0.25 : 1

Evidence 1: No in-situ glacial till or diamicton containing bluestone fragments on Salisbury Plain If glaciers deposited the stones, till should be widespread and detectable via boreholes and mapping. Missing it entirely is moderately unlikely. P(~E1 | H) = 0.40 P(~E1 | ~H) = 0.98 LR = 0.408 After E1: P(H | ~E1) = 0.0926 (9.26%) Odds = 0.102 : 1 (The first major downward revision, as the absence of expected deposits halves the probability.)

Evidence 2: No bluestone erratics in Pleistocene river gravels or along plausible flow paths Glacial transport would scatter fragments in river systems draining the area. Extensive gravel mapping shows none. P(~E2 | H) = 0.45 P(~E2 | ~H) = 0.98 LR = 0.459 After E2: P(H | ~E2) = 0.0448 (4.48%) Odds = 0.0469 : 1 (Further halving, as independent sediment records add strong negative weight.)

Evidence 3: No erratic train, moraines, or striations linking Preseli Hills to Stonehenge A transport path of 225 km should leave geomorphic traces (moraines, scratches on bedrock, a trail of erratics). Decades of fieldwork found none. P(~E3 | H) = 0.50 P(~E3 | ~H) = 0.98 LR = 0.510 After E3: P(H | ~E3) = 0.0233 (2.33%) Odds = 0.0239 : 1 (Continues the steady decline; landform evidence is expected but entirely missing.)

Evidence 4: Ice-sheet models (e.g., BRITICE-CHRONO) show the Irish Sea Ice Stream did not extend far enough south or follow the required path Modern reconstructions indicate the ice did not reach or route material precisely to Salisbury Plain for these lithologies. P(~E4 | H) = 0.60 P(~E4 | ~H) = 0.98 LR = 0.612 After E4: P(H | ~E4) = 0.0144 (1.44%) Odds = 0.0146 : 1 (Models carry some uncertainty, so the LR is less extreme, but still reduces belief.)

Evidence 5: Re-analysis of the Newall boulder (petrography, SEM-EDS, pXRF) This small welded tuff, once cited as a glacial erratic with supposed striations, matches a Preseli source exactly and shows no diagnostic glacial transport features. P(~E5 | H) = 0.70 P(~E5 | ~H) = 0.98 LR = 0.714 After E5: P(H | ~E5) = 0.0103 (1.03%) Odds = 0.0105 : 1 (A specific refutation lowers probability modestly, as it concerns one artefact rather than landscape-scale evidence.)

Evidence 6: January 2026 detrital zircon–apatite fingerprinting of river sediments near Stonehenge (>500 grains analysed) No mineral signatures diagnostic of Welsh or Scottish glacial sources. Zircon and apatite are highly durable tracers; analysing hundreds of grains makes missing a glacial signal extremely unlikely if ice had deposited material. P(~E6 | H) = 0.12 P(~E6 | ~H) = 0.99 LR = 0.121 After E6: P(H | ~E6) = 0.0013 (0.13%) Odds = 0.0013 : 1 (approximately 769 : 1 against H)

Final posterior: ≈ 0.13% (roughly 1 in 769).

This sequential approach shows how each independent negative result compounds the evidence against glacial transport. Early absences (till, erratics, landforms) drive the largest initial drops, while the powerful 2026 mineral fingerprinting delivers the decisive final blow. The overall likelihood ratio across all evidence is approximately 0.005, consistent with the composite analysis.

In Bayesian terms, the cumulative absence of multiple specific, high-sensitivity predictions constitutes strong evidence of absence. Human quarrying and transport from the Preseli Hills is now overwhelmingly supported.

Not a Speck of Hope for the Glacial Transport Theory

The Anomalous 464 Ma Zircon Grain in the Stonehenge Detrital Study

In Clarke & Kirkland’s 2025 paper (Communications Earth & Environment), one grain stands out amid 550 zircon analyses (401 concordant after ±10% discordance filter): a single concordant U–Pb age of 464 ± 16 Ma (2σ) from sample SH3 (River Wylye catchment). This Darriwilian age precisely matches the Fishguard Volcanic Group of the Mynydd Preseli, Wales—the accepted source of Stonehenge’s bluestones (Bevins et al., 2016).

The grain appears in the kernel-density plot (Fig. 2) as an isolated component within the minor Phanerozoic tail (~8% of the dataset). No cluster of similar ages exists; the spectrum is overwhelmingly dominated by Mesoproterozoic–Palaeoproterozoic Laurentian peaks (ca. 1090, 1690, 1740 Ma). Grain morphology (rounded, abraded, oscillatory/sector zoning, inherited cores) is consistent with multi-cycle sedimentary recycling rather than first-cycle glacial input.



Peer-review scrutiny The grain was rigorously questioned, particularly by Reviewer #1. In the initial round, it was called the paper’s “most interesting finding” and “a small nail in the coffin” for the glacial hypothesis, but its rarity (1/550) was noted. The reviewer mistakenly attributed the grain to SH1 (east/north-east of Stonehenge, near Andover) rather than the correct SH3 location (south-west of Stonehenge in the Wylye valley). Despite this misidentification of the sample, Reviewer #1’s broader point still stands: the grain’s catchment is not aligned with a direct ice-flow path from Mynydd Preseli to Stonehenge, weakening any glacial interpretation. In the revision round, the reviewer sharpened the critique: the abstract and conclusions could not “rule out” glacial transport if even one matching grain existed, warning it would provide “low hanging fruit for anyone wanting to dismiss the findings.” They demanded a “plausible argument” for its non-glacial origin, stronger emphasis that a genuine glacial signal from transporting 80+ multi-tonne erratics would produce a “much stronger 464 Ma signature,” and clarification of catchment context relative to ice-flow vectors.

Other reviewers reinforced this indirectly—Reviewer #2 highlighted the complete absence of corresponding old apatite as “extremely strong evidence against glacial transport,” as first-cycle delivery would not decouple zircon and apatite so cleanly.

Interpretation and rebuttal The authors addressed these points comprehensively. The grain is attributed to multi-cycle recycling from Palaeogene units (e.g., Thanet Formation), where sporadic Darriwilian ages occur (Stevens & Baykal, 2021). Darriwilian zircons are not unique to Preseli; they appear in recycled Cenozoic strata across southern Britain. Its isolation in a large-n dataset is statistically expected background noise given zircon’s durability and hydraulic biases. Critically, glacial transport of multiple bluestone erratics (or associated outwash) would leave a detectable, recurring population in the fine fraction—especially on zircon-poor Chalk—alongside coarse lithic clasts, other Welsh-affinity ages (Cadomian, Neoproterozoic arc), and first-cycle textures. None are present. The uniform Laurentian fingerprint across catchments, well-rounded mature grains, and lack of proximal crystalline sources further rule out significant glacial input.

Why it is not a “speck of hope” for glacial transport 

The grain’s rarity, non-uniqueness, catchment position, and inconsistency with expected glacial signatures (abundance, accompanying indicators) make it fully compatible with the paper’s conclusion: Salisbury Plain’s detrital record reflects Palaeogene recycling and Alpine-related remobilisation, not Pleistocene ice incursion. The rigorous peer-review exchange ensured this interpretation is robust and pre-empts common criticisms. 

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

New detrital mineral fingerprinting study bolsters case against glacial transport of Stonehenge megaliths

A paper published today in Communications Earth & Environment by Anthony J. I. Clarke and Christopher L. Kirkland provides one of the most robust detrital mineral provenance tests yet applied to the question of how Stonehenge’s non-sarsen megaliths reached Salisbury Plain. Using U–Pb dating of zircon and apatite from modern stream sediments, the authors present a compelling case that Pleistocene glacial transport is unlikely, reinforcing the prevailing view that Neolithic people moved the bluestones from Mynydd Preseli and the Altar Stone from northeast Scotland.

The study’s methodological rigour stands out. The authors collected four stream-sand samples (SH1–SH4) from the Avon–Test drainage system encircling Salisbury Plain, targeting catchments draining Chalk-dominated terrain with negligible local zircon sources. They analysed 550 zircon grains, yielding 401 concordant analyses (≤10% discordance), and 250 apatite grains. The zircon dataset is large by detrital geochronology standards, and the authors demonstrate inter-sample homogeneity via Kolmogorov–Smirnov tests, justifying aggregation into a composite spectrum. Age peaks at ca. 1090, 1690 and 1740 Ma dominate, matching Laurentian basement terranes of northern Britain (Grenville, Penokean, Trans-Hudson) rather than the Cadomian, Avalonian or Megumian signatures expected from southern Britain or Wales. The near-absence of Phanerozoic grains (only 8%) and the lack of a prominent Darriwilian (ca. 464 Ma) population—diagnostic of Mynydd Preseli rhyolites—are particularly telling. A single 464 ± 16 Ma grain from the Wylye catchment is interpreted as an inevitable outlier in a large-n dataset, most plausibly recycled from Palaeogene units rather than delivered directly from Wales.

Apatite U–Pb data add a second, independent constraint. Tera-Wasserburg regressions and ²⁰⁷Pb-corrected ages converge on a ca. 60–65 Ma signal, interpreted as post-depositional resetting linked to distal Alpine orogeny effects. Grain morphology (anhedral, abraded, homogeneous CL response) points to derivation from mature sedimentary or diagenetic sources, consistent with reworking of Palaeogene cover sequences rather than first-cycle crystalline input.

Statistical and visual comparisons strengthen the interpretation. A multidimensional scaling plot positions the Salisbury Plain composite close to the Thanet Formation (early Palaeocene, London Basin), statistically indistinguishable by KS test, and distant from potential glacial source regions. The authors argue that Neogene erosion of Palaeogene strata (including the Thanet Formation and Clay-with-Flints) released durable Laurentian zircons onto the zircon-poor Chalk, where they were subsequently recycled into modern river sands via ancestral Avon and Wylye drainage. This polycyclic pathway explains the observed fingerprint without invoking ice-sheet transport.

The work directly addresses the glacial hypothesis’s key prediction: that southward ice flow from the Midlands or southwest from Wales would have delivered a detectable ca. 464 Ma zircon signal and Laurentian signatures from northern Britain. Neither is present in meaningful abundance. The authors also note the absence of coarse first-cycle lithic clasts or undisputed glacial indicators (tills, erratics) on the Plain, aligning with the consensus that Anglian ice margins lay well to the north.

Overall, the study is methodologically sound, with a large, well-characterised dataset, appropriate statistical treatment, and integration of multiple mineral systems and comparative datasets. It does not definitively disprove glacial transport—absence of evidence is not evidence of absence—but it significantly weakens the hypothesis by showing that the modern detrital cargo is inconsistent with substantial glaciogenic input. For those working on Stonehenge provenance, this paper represents a high bar for future tests of the glacial model and tilts the balance further toward human agency.

Grains of truth on the bluestones

Grains of sand prove people – not glaciers – transported Stonehenge rocks

Published: January 21, 2026 10.08am GMT

 Anthony Clarke, Chris Kirkland, Curtin University

https://theconversation.com/grains-of-sand-prove-people-not-glaciers-transported-stonehenge-rocks-271310


The peer reviewed paper:

Saturday, 17 January 2026

Auditing the claim of Holocene flooding of Stonehenge Bottom

Robert John Langdon has often claimed that the area around Stonehenge was flooded during prehistoric times, his latest Facebook post claims the evidence is in a borehole record and is auditable:


So I took him up, with an independent audit of what the borehole record actually shows.  

Borehole records available from https://mapapps2.bgs.ac.uk/geoindex/home.html?layer=BGSBoreholes

It's a long report, but the summary is: 

No direct evidence of submersion or flooding in the Holocene. The site appears to have been stable dry land since the end of the Pleistocene, consistent with the formation of chalk dry valleys through periglacial erosion and chalk dissolution.

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Borehole Report: BGS Borehole 17111365 (SU14SW62), Stonehenge Bottom

Executive Summary

This report summarises the key findings from the British Geological Survey (BGS) borehole log for Borehole 17111365 (reference SU14SW62), located in Stonehenge Bottom, Wiltshire, UK. The borehole was drilled as part of the A303 Stonehenge Ground Investigation project for the Highways Agency. It reaches a depth of 50.00 m and primarily encounters chalk formations with a thin superficial layer of topsoil and gravelly clay. No groundwater strikes were recorded during drilling, though borehole flushing medium was used.

Regarding the specific query on whether this location was under water in the last 10,000 years (the Holocene epoch), the borehole log shows no direct evidence of Holocene aquatic deposits such as alluvial silts, clays, or peats that would indicate prolonged submersion or flooding. The superficial deposits appear to be periglacial in origin (from the late Pleistocene), consistent with colluvial or head material common in chalk dry valleys. Mainstream geological interpretations suggest that dry valleys like Stonehenge Bottom have remained largely dry since the end of the last glacial period (approximately 11,700 years ago), formed by meltwater erosion under periglacial conditions. However, some alternative archaeological and palaeoenvironmental interpretations propose higher water tables and seasonal or tidal influences in the Mesolithic period (around 10,000–6,000 years ago), potentially leading to temporary flooding in low-lying areas. These views are based on core samples from nearby sites and historical depictions, but they remain debated and are not supported by this specific borehole log.

Borehole Details

  • Borehole ID: 17111365
  • BGS Reference: SU14SW62
  • Location: Stonehenge Bottom, near Amesbury, Wiltshire. National Grid Reference: 412924.00 E, 141917.00 N (OSGB36).
  • Ground Elevation: 96.00 m Ordnance Datum (OD).
  • Drilling Method: Rotary cored using 150 mm triple tube wireline techniques.
  • Drilled By: Noble (logged by JCKLB, checked by SJS).
  • Drilling Dates: Not specified in the log, but associated with the 2001 project.
  • Total Depth: 50.00 m.
  • Project: A303 Stonehenge Ground Investigation, carried out for the Highways Agency.
  • Remarks: Continued on multiple sheets (6 in total). Core recovery varied, with some reduced diameter cores due to catcher and core loss. No strikes for groundwater; flushing medium used for borehole stability.

Strata Summary

The borehole penetrates a thin superficial deposit overlying extensive chalk bedrock. The strata are dominated by various grades of chalk, typical of the Seaford Chalk Formation in the White Chalk Subgroup (Upper Cretaceous). Descriptions include structureless chalk, fractured chalk, and chalk with flint nodules or fragments. No significant organic or alluvial layers indicative of recent (Holocene) water bodies were noted.

The following table summarises the key strata, depths, thicknesses, and descriptions (interpreted from log sheets, with depths in metres below ground level):

Depth Range (m)

Thickness (m)

Level (m OD)

Legend

Description

0.00–0.10

0.10

95.90

C

Topsoil: Brown slightly silty sandy clay with rootlets.

0.10–1.00

0.90

95.00

B

Brown slightly silty sandy gravel: Gravel is fine to medium angular to subangular flint in a clay matrix. Medium density. Likely head deposit (periglacial colluvium).

1.00–5.20

4.20

90.80

Chalk (Grade V)

Structureless chalk: White, low to medium density, with fine to medium gravel-sized chalk and flint fragments. Occasional yellow staining.

5.20–9.11

3.91

86.89

Chalk (Grade IV)

Fractured chalk: White, medium density, with subhorizontal and subvertical fractures. Some orange staining and flint nodules.

9.11–18.50

9.39

77.50

Chalk (Grade III)

Blocky chalk: White to pale yellow, high density, with closely spaced fractures. Includes flint bands and nodular flints.

18.50–28.45

9.95

67.55

Chalk (Grade II)

Firm chalk: White, very high density, with occasional fractures and fine flint pebbles. Some grey marl partings.

28.45–47.50

19.05

48.50

Chalk (Grade I)

Hard chalk: White, massive, with sparse fractures. Includes yellow-brown staining and rare fossil fragments.

47.50–50.00

2.50

46.00

Chalk (Grade I)

As above, with increased drilling fluid loss noted. Exploratory hole end at 50.00 m.

Notes on Strata:

  • Chalk grades follow the CIRIA classification (Grades I–V, where I is intact hard chalk and V is structureless/soft).
  • Flint horizons and fragments are common throughout the chalk, typical of Cretaceous marine deposits.
  • Core recovery was generally good (70–100%), but some intervals showed loss due to fracturing.
  • No samples or tests for palaeoenvironmental indicators (e.g., pollen, diatoms) are mentioned in the log.

Groundwater and Hydrogeology

  • Groundwater Strikes: None encountered during drilling.
  • Behaviour: Borehole made using flushing medium (likely water or polymer-based). Remarks indicate "groundwater made at borehole flushing medium," suggesting artificial introduction rather than natural inflow.
  • Implications: The chalk aquifer in this region is highly permeable, but the absence of strikes suggests the water table was below the drilled depth or not intersected. Current water table in the area is typically 20–40 m below ground, but historical variations are possible.

Analysis: Evidence of Water in the Last 10,000 Years

The borehole log provides insights into the geological history but focuses on engineering geology rather than palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. Key points:

From the Borehole Log

  • Superficial Deposits: The top 1.0 m consists of topsoil and gravelly clay with flints, interpreted as head (colluvial/periglacial deposits). These are typical of late Pleistocene solifluction under cold climates, not Holocene aquatic environments. No laminated silts, clays, shells, or organic matter indicative of lakes, rivers, or flooding were recorded.
  • Bedrock: Entirely chalk from ~1.0 m down, formed in a Cretaceous marine setting (80–100 million years ago). Fractures and staining may indicate groundwater flow, but no recent sedimentary overlays.
  • Conclusion from Log: No direct evidence of submersion or flooding in the Holocene. The site appears to have been stable dry land since the end of the Pleistocene, consistent with the formation of chalk dry valleys through periglacial erosion and chalk dissolution.

Broader Geological Context

Dry valleys like Stonehenge Bottom are a hallmark of chalk landscapes in southern England, including Salisbury Plain. Their formation is attributed to:

  • Pleistocene Periglacial Processes: During the last glacial maximum (Devensian stage, ~20,000–11,700 years ago), permafrost and meltwater carved valleys. Fluvial incision occurred under frozen ground conditions, leading to deep erosion without permanent rivers. Post-glacial warming caused springs to dry up as the water table lowered due to chalk permeability and reduced precipitation.
  • Holocene Stability: Colluvial deposits in nearby dry valleys (e.g., east of River Till) accumulated from postglacial times through the medieval period, primarily via slope wash rather than fluvial action. No widespread evidence of Holocene rivers or lakes in these valleys; they have remained dry, with occasional surface water only in historical times (e.g., 19th-century depictions of ponds in Stonehenge Bottom).

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He returns with another Facebook post on 20th January 2026.

"Borehole SU14SW60: Why “Geological Judgement” Is Not Science

Geology has a massive credibility problem — not because it lacks data, but because it so often refuses to measure what it already records. Instead, it relies on qualitative language: minorlocalisedinsignificantlargely dry. These words sound authoritative, but they are not scientific. They are opinions.
So let’s remove opinion entirely and look at one British Geological Survey borehole using nothing but arithmetic."
See more: 
https://www.facebook.com/groups/prehistoricbritain/permalink/2106406970193556/


Verification of Langdon's Claims

  • Presence of Features: The log does contain the types of features he counts:

    • Gravel/Cobble Bands: Mentions of "gravel sized flint/chalk fragments" (e.g., in structureless chalk), "nodular flints" (often cobble-sized, 64–256 mm), "flint bands," and "sheeted flint" (interpreted as gravel by Langdon). Examples: 8.25–8.38 m (likely drilling-induced gravel), 9.42–9.60 m (flint band with possible shell context), 18.00–19.04 m (gravel + cobbles from fractured zone).
    • Marl Seams: Thin grey marl partings noted (e.g., 11.29–11.30 m, 15.76–15.79 m, 20.00–20.50 m, 31.58 m).
    • Shell Material: "Shell fragments" or "fossil fragments" (e.g., 12.80–13.10 m shells, 14.15 m shell fragments). These are Cretaceous fossils (e.g., echinoids, bivalves), with impressions from ancient dissolution.
    • Sheeted Flint/Lags: "Sheeted flint associated with erosion surfaces" (e.g., 29.08–29.30 m, 35.60–35.70 m).
    • Count Accuracy: His 23 intervals align with log entries (e.g., specific drilling notes or strata changes). Thickness sum (4.67 m) is conservative, excluding point features.

    The quantitative metrics (12.8% involvement, 0.63 events/m) are mathematically correct based on his criteria.

  • Interpretation of Features as "Water Evidence": This is where the claims falter.

    • Ancient Marine Origin: All listed features are inherent to the Seaford Chalk Formation, deposited in a shallow Cretaceous sea ~94–89 million years ago. Flint nodules/bands formed diagenetically (silica precipitation in marine sediments); they are not transported cobbles or gravels from recent flow. Marl seams are clay-rich marine layers, not post-glacial ponding. Shell fragments are fossilised marine organisms, dissolved during ancient burial/compaction, not Holocene water. Sheeted flint represents sedimentary bedding planes, not erosion by recent water.
    • No Holocene Indicators: No alluvial silts, sorted/rounded gravels, organic peats, or freshwater shells typical of recent flooding. Superficial deposits are periglacial head (Pleistocene solifluction under cold, dry conditions), not fluvial. Fractures and staining indicate long-term groundwater flow through permeable chalk, but the water table is low (no strikes), consistent with dry valleys since ~11,700 years ago.
    • Misapplication of Metrics: Counting Cretaceous sedimentary layers as "discrete water incursions" misrepresents geology. The entire chalk is "water-affected" in its formation, but this does not imply submersion in the last 10,000 years. Incidence density ignores stratigraphic continuity—features are beds spanning the formation, not repeated Holocene events.
  • Critique of Geological Practice: Langdon argues qualitative terms ("minor," "insignificant") undermine science, citing the Stonehenge tunnel redesign as a failure of underestimating water. However:

    • Geology integrates qualitative logs with quantitative data (e.g., permeability tests, dating). The A303 project used such metrics; redesign addressed phosphatic chalk and aquifer flow, not ignored Holocene flooding.
    • Adjacent boreholes (e.g., SU14SW62) show similar features with varying interpretations due to natural variability, not "guesswork."
    • His approach, while quantitative, lacks context—it's like counting tree rings without recognising the tree's age.

Broader Context: Was This Spot Under Water in the Last 10,000 Years?

  • Mainstream View: No. Stonehenge Bottom is a chalk dry valley formed by Pleistocene meltwater erosion under permafrost. Holocene warming lowered the water table; valleys have remained dry, with colluvial (not fluvial) superficial deposits. 


Friday, 16 January 2026

Low Hanging Stones

 I'm reading Stonehenge Deciphered: A Critical Reading of Geometry, Landscape, and Intention by Alun G. Rees (2025) and I noticed his explanation of a possible way to raft the Bluestones from Wales. It is fairly standard and one I have often used, though I'm a dryland route man by preference. I'm surprised a few commentators think it is a new theory though.

I used an illustration by Billy Colfer from a Newgrange book to show it back in 2012, I seem to remember that millstones quarried from cliffs in Ireland were moved in a similar manner in more modern historical times.


The diagrams are from the excellent book "Newgrange".

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Pleistocene Glacial and Periglacial Features in Somerset: Limits of Ice Advance and Local Dynamics in the Levels and Mendips

Map of Somerset Levels

The Pleistocene history of Somerset mirrors that of north Devon in many respects, characterised by peripheral interactions with the Irish Sea Ice Sheet rather than extensive inland glaciation. The Somerset Levels—a low-lying coastal plain prone to flooding—and the adjacent Mendip Hills exhibit a record of ice-marginal deposits, periglacial processes, and interglacial marine incursions, but without evidence of widespread ice override or floating sea ice penetrating deep into the interior. This reflects the region's position at the southern fringe of the British-Irish Ice Sheet, where glacial advances during stages such as the Anglian (Marine Isotope Stage 12, around 478,000–424,000 years ago) or Wolstonian were constrained by topography and climate, leading to localised sedimentation from meltwater and periglacial activity rather than broad ice-sheet coverage.

In the Somerset Levels, glacial deposits indicate limited ingress by the Irish Sea lobe, primarily in the northern areas around Clevedon and Kenn. Here, the Kenn Formation includes tills (diamictons with striated boulders), glaciofluvial gravels, and outwash sands, exposed in col-gullies like Court Hill and Nightingale Valley. These sequences, featuring erratic clasts such as Chalk flints, Greensand chert, and Cretaceous microfossils derived from the west, suggest an ice-marginal environment with proglacial outwash and possible flow tills, but no subglacial deformation indicative of extensive advance. (Note: While major Cretaceous chalk outcrops are concentrated in eastern and southeastern England, such as the North and South Downs, the chalk flints and related erratics in these Somerset deposits were sourced from exposures in the Irish Sea Basin, including the Antrim Chalk in Northern Ireland and possibly seabed sediments or outcrops in northwest Wales. These were entrained by the Irish Sea Ice Sheet and transported southwards and eastwards into the Bristol Channel, explaining their "western" provenance despite the material's geological association with eastern formations.) The deposits are interpreted as dating to a pre-Anglian or Wolstonian event, with the ice front impinging from the Bristol Channel but not progressing far southward; for instance, southern sites like Greylake show only rare glacigenic elements in basal diamictons, and erratic-free gravels dominate further inland. Interglacial marine and estuarine units, such as the Burtle Formation (shelly sands and gravels up to 5–10 metres OD, correlated with Stages 9, 7, and 5e) and Yew Tree Formation (estuarine silts with marine molluscs like Macoma balthica), overlie or interdigitate with these, highlighting episodic sea-level rises during warmer periods without glacial involvement. Periglacial features in the Levels include aeolian coversands, cryoturbated breccias, and colluvial silts, as seen at Holly Lane near Clevedon, where niveo-aeolian loams and frost-shattered limestones reflect cold, dry Devensian conditions (Stages 4–2) with tundra-like vegetation indicated by molluscs such as Pupilla muscorum.

The Mendip Hills, rising to around 300 metres OD, experienced predominantly periglacial activity, with no direct evidence of ice-sheet coverage or independent ice caps akin to those on Dartmoor. Slope deposits and alluvial fans dominate, such as at Bourne and Wookey Station, where fan gravels with cryoturbation, involutions, and cold-stage molluscs (e.g., Pupilla muscorum, Carychium arenaria) indicate mass movement and braided stream deposition under periglacial regimes. These are interspersed with palaeosols reflecting brief interstadials, and aeolian sands derived from distant sources (e.g., Tertiary deposits in Devon) point to wind-blown transport during arid cold phases. At Brean Down on the Mendip fringe, a sequence of rockfall breccias, aeolian silts, and palaeosols spans the Devensian, with fossil mammals (reindeer, arctic fox) and molluscs suggesting steppe-tundra landscapes and minor climatic ameliorations, possibly correlating with Stage 3 interstadials. Glacial influence is marginal at best; enigmatic glaciofluvial gravels at Bleadon Hill contain local Carboniferous Limestone clasts, potentially linked to proglacial lake shores or outwash from Irish Sea ice nearby, but without far-travelled erratics confirming override. Karstic fissures in the Mendips, such as at Bathampton Down, contain recycled erratics (flint, chert) in infill gravels, suggesting periglacial reworking rather than direct glacial emplacement.

Critically, these deposits do not indicate high sea levels facilitating floating ice or marine incursions deep into Somerset during glacial maxima. As in Devon, Pleistocene cold stages coincided with global sea-level drops exceeding 100 metres, exposing the Bristol Channel and facilitating terrestrial periglacial processes rather than glaciomarine environments. Deposits lack marine microfossils in inland contexts, and erratics at higher elevations (e.g., up to 20–30 metres OD in terraces) are attributed to periglacial solifluction or fluvial reworking from earlier events, not to ice-rafting during elevated sea stands. The notion of inflowing sea ice is unsupported, as coastal erratics (e.g., at Weston-in-Gordano) are confined to low elevations and tied to interstadial highstands, not peak glaciation.

In essence, the Somerset Levels and Mendip Hills exemplify a constrained Pleistocene glaciation similar to north Devon's: marginal impingement by the Irish Sea lobe in the lowlands, creating limited outwash and tills without further inland flow, complemented by pervasive periglacial weathering on the hills. This peripheral dynamic, driven by local topography and without coalescence with larger ice sheets, accounts for the observed features through meltwater, solifluction, and aeolian processes, aligning with reconstructions of the British-Irish Ice Sheet's southern limits. Persistent suggestions that the Irish Sea Ice Sheet overrode the Mendips or extended further east across the chalk escarpment to deliver erratics to Salisbury Plain are refuted by multiple lines of evidence. Firstly, there is a complete absence of glacial drift, tills, or subglacial features on the Mendip plateau or its interior; instead, the hills show only periglacial slope deposits, cryoturbation, and aeolian sands, with any recycled erratics in karst fissures attributable to solifluction rather than direct ice emplacement. The ice lobe's contact was limited to the eastern margin of the Mendips at the Somerset Levels, with no evidence of overriding the hills, as confirmed by the lack of striations or erratics on higher ground. Secondly, the easternmost glacial limit in Somerset is marked by scattered deposits in the Bridgwater-Glastonbury area, well short of the chalk escarpment in Wiltshire; beyond this, sediments transition to erratic-free fluvial and periglacial materials. On Salisbury Plain itself, there are no glacial deposits, moraines, or far-travelled erratics from Irish Sea sources that would be expected from an overriding ice sheet capable of transporting large lithologies; Stonehenge bluestones are instead explained by human transport. Geochemical provenancing matches the bluestones to specific Welsh quarries without requiring glacial intervention, and the absence of intermediate glacial drifts between Preseli and Salisbury Plain undermines long-distance ice transport theories. Overall, the southern limits of the Irish Sea Ice Sheet are firmly established in the Bristol Channel and coastal Somerset, with no stratigraphic, geomorphological, or sedimentological support for extensions over the Mendips or to Salisbury Plain. Further optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating and sediment provenance studies could refine chronologies, but the consensus highlights distinctly localised phenomena in this extra-glacial landscape.

References