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Judi Lynn

(162,385 posts)
Tue May 21, 2024, 04:42 AM May 2024

Archaeologists Found Ancient Monuments That May Be Pathways for the Dead

Archaeologists Found Ancient Monuments That May Be Pathways for the Dead
LiDAR technology revealed hidden structures that could've guide spirits in the afterlife.

BY TIM NEWCOMB
PUBLISHED: APR 29, 2024 4:00 PM EDT



Cavan Images//Getty Images

  • Using LiDAR technology, archaeologists discovered a cluster of five rare Neolithic-era earthwork monuments in Ireland.

  • The ancient find highlights ritualistic practices, likely associated with solar events and ceremonial pathways for the dead.

  • Now considered some of the largest archaeological monuments in the country, researchers hope the discovery will help transform our understanding of Ireland’s prehistoric culture.


    A grouping of five major earthwork monuments have rested together in the Irish town of Baltinglass since the Neolithic period. But we’ve just recently seen them, thanks to LiDAR technology. Considered some of the largest archaeological monuments ever found in Ireland, these rare “cursus” constructions played a pivotal role in ancient life, offering ritual and ceremonial significance for the early farming communities and potentially even forming “routes for the dead” headed to an afterlife.

    The discovery was chronicled by University of Aberdeen’s James O’Driscoll, who has spent more than a decade studying the Baltinglass landscape—an area known for Bronze Age and medieval forts, but not the Neolithic period’s cursus. Thanks to the light detection and ranging (LiDAR) laser mapping of the topography, O’Driscoll was able to discover the largest cursus cluster in either Ireland or Britain. The findings were published in the journal Antiquity.
    A cursus—described by O’Driscoll in the study as a causewayed enclosure defined by segmented banks, ditches, and palisades—“became a means of drawing together disparate communities to perform rituals and to create a unified group identity.”

    These enclosures have been found clustered together in southern England, France, and Scandinavia, but the Baltinglass find highlighted a group of five cursus monuments. This offers a distinct look into Neolithic Ireland, “which is why it’s such an important discovery and was something we didn’t think would appear, because groups of cursus monuments just don’t exist in Ireland,” O’Driscoll told Live Science.

    The largest structure is 1,312 feet long, while other, similar structures are generally about 500 to 650 feet in length. “The discovery of the cursus monuments is particularly significant,” O’Driscoll told Newsweek, “as these are incredibly rare in Ireland.”

    More:
    https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/archaeology/a60619988/ancient-monuments-pathways-for-the-dead/
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