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‘SARSEN STONES IN WESSEX’: A SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES PROJECT CONTEXTUALISED AND RENEWED

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2020

Katy A Whitaker*
Affiliation:
107 Pavenhill, Purton, Wiltshire SN5 4DB, UK. Email: k.a.whitaker@pgr.reading.ac.uk
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Abstract

This paper reviews the Society of Antiquaries’ Evolution of the Landscape project, which started in 1974, and the project’s Sarsen Stones in Wessex survey. The survey was an ambitious public archaeology undertaking, involving c 100 volunteers led by Fellows of the Society during the 1970s. Its aims, objectives and outcomes are described in this article. The survey’s unique dataset, produced for the counties of Wiltshire, Hampshire and Dorset, has now been digitised. Drawing on the dataset, the paper situates the Evolution of the Landscape project in the context of later twentieth-century British archaeology. It demonstrates the importance not only of individual Fellows, but also contemporary movements in academic and development-led archaeology, to the direction of the Society’s activities in this formative period for the discipline today, and shows how the Society’s research was engaged with some of archaeology’s most pressing cultural resource management issues.

Information

Type
Research paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Society of Antiquaries of London, 2020
Figure 0

Fig 1. The Valley of Stones, Marlborough Downs (Wiltshire) has one of England’s few remaining large sarsen spreads. It is reputed to resemble the chalk upland before prehistoric and more recent clearance, commonly for agricultural purposes, removed stones from their natural positions. Despite the historical quarrying industry, there are estimated to be more than 10,000 sarsens lying in this dry chalk coombe (Small et al1970). Photograph: the author.

Figure 1

Fig 2. Sarsen in the walls of St Peter’s church, Broad Hinton (Wiltshire), demonstrates the variability both of its use – here as rubble walling rather than cut blocks – and its lithology, with flint pebble clasts amongst the cemented sand in some pieces. Photograph: the author.

Figure 2

Fig 3. The Sarsen Stones in Wessex Tally Card for a possible sarsen stone recorded by a volunteer in Boldre (Hampshire), showing the information required by the project. Following the completion of the record, at least five additional notes were made, perhaps at different times and likely by different people, in pencils, black biro, red ink and blue felt-tip pen. SAL, MS953/3/2/1/B17c. Reproduced with the permission of the Society of Antiquaries of London. Photograph: the author.

Figure 3

Table 1. The different record formats used by volunteers in the Sarsen Stones in Wessex survey, with frequency by type and county. The total of 879 includes seven records of areas unsuccessfully searched for sarsens.

Figure 4

Table 2. General characteristics of the 872 Sarsen Stones in Wessex records compiled by volunteer recorders, by county. *One Hampshire record is very clearly dated 1973, an obvious error on the part of the recorder, but cannot be re-attributed.

Figure 5

Fig 4. An extract from the Sarsen Stones in Wessex 1:100,000 distribution map for Dorset. Black dots show locations of single sarsen stones attributed to medieval, later and undated uses. The area outlined in black adjacent to the circled cross is the Valley of Stones in Littlebredy parish. Pale circular marks on the map show where coloured stickers once marked locations. The stickers were colour-coded to indicate information including date of use (eg red for prehistoric), or sarsens that were documented in bibliographic sources but no longer present on the ground. SAL, MS953/2/2a-b. Reproduced with the permission of the Society of Antiquaries of London. Photograph: the author.

Figure 6

Fig 5. The distribution of all 872 digitised Sarsen Stones in Wessex project records. Bowen and Smith’s original map published in 1977 displayed three classes: single natural sarsen; group of natural sarsens; utilised sarsen. Here, single and grouped unused sarsens (Bowen and Smith’s ‘natural’ stones), utilised sarsen and the 430 records unclassed by volunteer recorders are shown. This dataset includes twenty-six records made after 1977 and may include duplicate records in the more complex Wiltshire subset. Includes Ordnance Survey data from 2017. Map: the author.

Figure 7

Table 3. The number of records created by the most active volunteers, by county, each volunteer making more than five Sarsen survey records.

Figure 8

Fig 6. The distribution of all 872 digitised Sarsen Stones in Wessex project records distinguishing the most prolific volunteers. Includes Ordnance Survey data from 2017. Map: the author.

Figure 9

Fig 7. (a) The solid geology of the large parish of Portesham (Dorset) includes Cretaceous and Palaeogene rock units with which sarsen stone is commonly associated. (b) A short distance to the south-east of Dorset’s large natural sarsen spread in the Valley of Stones, Portesham includes sarsens used in multiple ways since prehistory. See text for details of records numbered D072 to D088. Includes Ordnance Survey data from 2017 and British Geological Survey data from 2018. Maps: the author.