Giant Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery Discovered In Salisbury, England

Wiltshire is well known for its Bronze Age barrows, especially those that survive within the landscape of the World Heritage site of Stonehenge and on the chalklands of Cranborne Chase. In contrast, little is known of similar sites that existed closer to the medieval city of Salisbury. The discovery of a new huge Bronze Age barrow cemetery has provided scientists with a new opportunity to study these ancient burial places.

Round barrows were first constructed in the Neolithic period, although most were built during the Beaker and Early Bronze Age (2400 – 1500 BC), and usually consist of a central burial, a mound, and an enclosing ditch. Their size can vary from less than 10m in diameter to an impressive 50m, although most average 20-30m. Their earthworks vary too – some have large central mounds (‘bell barrows’), others small central mounds and outer banks (‘disc barrows’), and some have central hollows (‘pond barrows’). Creating their ditches would have provided material to help make the

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