A circular prehistoric monument built by early Welsh farmers for ritual performance has been found in Wales
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
A circular monument with an entrance has been discovered in a prehistoric landscape in the Vale of Glamorgan
A circular monument has been discovered in the Vale of Glamorgan© Neil Phillips / APAC Ltd A circular prehistoric monument built by some of the earliest farmers in Wales has been discovered by archaeologists near a series of pits containing pottery and flint used by Neolithic people around 5,000 years ago.
Experts say people would have used the monument, spanning seven metres in diameter and defined by a shallow, flat-bottomed ditch dug into underlying limestone rock, as a place of ritual performance in the Vale of Glamorgan.
“The site is providing a remarkable opportunity to gain access to a large amount of data across a spread of prehistoric time periods,” said Dr Neil Phillips, the Director of the archaeological group APAC Ltd.
“Such an opportunity rarely happens and the surviving archaeology is rarely appreciated before it disappears.”
Housing developers have pledged artefacts from the grounds to National Museum Wales, whose Principal Curator for Prehistory, Adam Gwilt, called the discovery “important new evidence” of the early farming communities in the region.
What do you think? Leave a comment below.Three places to find the archaeology of Wales inNational Museum CardiffStep into the world of famous explorers and travel on an adventure
uncovering treasures from around the world at the exciting new
exhibition, Treasures: Adventures in Archaeology.
Abergavenny MuseumHoused in a Regency hunting lodge, which is known as 'the keep',
Abergavenny Museum is set within the ruins of a Norman castle. The
museum presents the story of this historic market town from prehistoric,
Roman and Norman times through to the present day.
Egypt Centre, SwanseaThe Egypt Centre houses the largest collection of Egyptian antiquities
in Wales. The museum officially opened in September 1998, and has more than 5,000 items in the collection.
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/archaeology/art556440-vale-glamorgan-circular-monument-ritual-farmers