Stonehenge May Have Served As A Solar Calendar

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Professor Timothy Darvill thinks the 30 stones of Stonehenge's Sarsen Circle represent the days of the month (Credit: Garethwiscombe, CC BY 2.0/ Wikimedia Commons)

Archeologists have long speculated that Stonehenge, the prehistoric stone circle in Wiltshire, England, was a sort of astronomical calendar because of its perfect alignment with the midsummer and midwinter solstices. However, they have struggled to determine how the calendar worked. Now, Professor Timothy Darvill of Bournemouth University in the UK, may have finally solved the mystery. The expert believes the 5,000-year-old neolithic monument served as a solar calendar for the local residents.

"It's a perpetual calendar that recalibrates every winter solstice sunset," Darvill says. "This would have enabled the ancient people who lived near the monument in what is now Wiltshire, UK, to keep track of days and months of the year."

The Stonehenge rocks are perfectly aligned to capture the solstices (Credit: Astroskiandhike/CC BY-SA 4.0/ Wikimedia Commons)

Darvill's quest to find the monument's true purpose began in 2020 after a new study revealed that most of the sarsen stones — the rocks found at Stonehenge — were from the same local quarry. They were also taken and set up at Stonehenge at the same time. The expert says this indicated they served a common cause.

To find out what that could be, Darvill turned to the monument's arrangement for clues. Stonehenge's outer circle originally comprised 30 large sarsen stones linked together by 30 stone crossbars, or lintels. Darvill believes they represented the 30 days of the month. The researcher further theorizes that the five sets of trilithons — pairs of large vertical stones each with a horizontal stone atop — that lie within the Sarsen Circle, represent five additional days. The archeologist further asserts that the four so-called "station stones" outside the sarsen circle served as a reminder to add a leap day every four years.

Darvill thinks Stonehenge's five trilithons represent additional five days (Credit: TobyEditor/ CC BY 4.0,/wikimedia.org)

"Thirty, 5, and 4 are interesting numbers in a calendrical kind of sense," says Darvill. "Those 30 uprights around the main sarsen ring at Stonehenge would fit very nicely as days of the month. Multiply that by 12, and you get 360, add on another 5 from the central trilithons, you get 365."

Darvill, who published his findings in the journal Antiquities on March 2, 2022, is unsure why the ancient people decided to develop a solar calendar. He thinks they may have gotten the idea from the Mesopotamians and Egyptians, who also created solar calendars during that time. It is also possible that they embarked on the initiative on their own.

Four "station stones" outside the Sarsen Circle may have served as a reminder for leap years (Credit: Dietrich Krieger/ CC BY-SA 3.0/ Wikimedia Commons)

While Darvill's theory sounds plausible, not everyone is convinced. "It's certainly intriguing, but ultimately it fails to convince," says Mike Parker Pearson, an archeologist at the University College London in the UK. "The numbers don't really add up: why should two uprights of a trilithon equal one upright of the sarsen circle to represent one day? There's selective use of evidence to try to make the numbers fit."

Resources: Livescience.com, Newscientist.com, newatlas.com

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75 Comments
  • robloxno0b
    robloxno0bover 2 years
    I love stonehenge!
    • dream_beyond
      dream_beyondover 2 years
      Boy do we have lots of mysteries to uncover!
      • adahmi
        adahmiover 2 years
        Cool!
        • godmode
          godmodeover 2 years
          I thought 3 years ago that it's what that was for
          • free_from_life
            • disgurlswims
              disgurlswimsover 2 years
              WOW! what if these are the rocks in frozen 2! Look them up and tell me what u think!
              • ivyian
                ivyianover 2 years
                I love the new idea~ Quite surprising but also quite logical and reasonable~ I'm a GIGANTIC Fan of it!
                • user5897
                  user5897over 2 years
                  Wow. I can’t wait to see what else the scientists discover!
                  • brooklynj
                    brooklynjover 2 years
                    Wow so cool! This guy was smart to feagure that out! As far that I gotten was "those are rocks in a circle" and this guy over here finding our what it means! While people where fighting over toilet paper doing anything to get hand sanitizer these people where finding out the true meaning of this! I mean this is one way to spend your time in quartine! ANYWHO HAVE A GREAT DAY GUYS BYE!
                    • catdo
                      catdoover 2 years
                      It's amazing👍 how he would be able to do this.
                    • ollieboo
                      olliebooover 2 years
                      Pretty interesting. I wonder if anyone will ever figure out 100% what Stonehenge really was intended for. So many mysteries of the ancient world.