Submitted by HOLYWELL on Sunday, 05 July 2026 (10856 reads)
Springs and Holy WellsA legend associated with this well will be familiar to many - the story goes that the landowner didn't like people visiting the well and filled it in. The well's water then started to arise through his house, so he re-opened it! More details in Anne's comment below. The present structure is Victorian. It is found along a path to the left of the church. Image submitted by 2ruth
Submitted by hamish on Sunday, 05 July 2026 (14678 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeIt is said that if you prick this stone at midnight it bleeds. It stands proudly amongst the trees and bushes, alone of its kind in this area. By the A4136 about 1 mile from Staunton in the direction of Christchurch. Image submitted by 2ruth
Incredibly rare 'Chieftain' burial objects found in Lechlade (amber beads, archer's wrist guard and copper dagger), now on show in the Prehistory Gallery Read Article | 6 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages
Submitted by Andy B on Sunday, 05 July 2026 (31 reads)
EventsFollowing popular appearances at Brighton Pier, Neoancients and Megalithomania, Andy B is back for another talk in London, this time in Hackney for the Last Tuesday Society. Live at the Absinthe Parlour and Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities, Monday 20th July, details below... Image submitted by Andy B
Submitted by Andy B on Saturday, 04 July 2026 (881 reads)
Multi-periodLarger scale excavation work began in June this year, with archaeologists looking to understand more about the Roman foundations present on the site. Excavations here in 2009 revealed signs of a prehistoric hunting camp from the end of the last Ice Age and a high-status Roman building. The speculation is that the building was a bath house, which is certainly possible given the closeness to the ancient springs. Image submitted by Andy B
It's not every day you get to visit a live archaeological excavation within a couple of hundred metres of where you live! Here Wayne the lead archaeologist describes the different features of the Roman bath house. Hot room to the right of the photo, furnace to the back right, warm and cold rooms to the left. At the open day held Saturday 4th July 2026 Read Article | 1 News and Comments | Category: Other Photo Pages
Submitted by Andy B on Friday, 03 July 2026 (578 reads)
Events
Steve Marshall's renowned book Exploring Avebury: The Essential Guide is just out in a newly expanded Second Edition. To celebrate, History Press have very kindly offered three copies to give away to Megalithic Portal readers! Image submitted by Andy B
Submitted by TheCaptain on Thursday, 02 July 2026 (16379 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeNot too much remains to be seen at first of this circle but at least 21 stones do remain, mostly flattened or stumps. On top of the ridge of Louden Hill at 935 feet altitude about a kilometre to the southwest of Stannon stone circle, northwest Bodmin Moor, in Cornwall. Image submitted by RoyReed
The Louden 'tri-stone' - was this set up to reference Rough Tor in the background? Several other Bodmin circles within sight of Rough Tor have similar shaped stones Read Article | 3 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages
Submitted by h_fenton on Wednesday, 01 July 2026 (14800 reads)
Iron Age and Later PrehistoryA conical shaped hill rising to a height of 330 metres above sea level. Close to the base of the hill is a rampart up to 5 metres high (outside measurement) that goes part of the way around the hill (North and NE sides), it has been suggested that the rampart was never completed but does represent a rampart belonging to an Iron Age Fort or enclosure. Image submitted by MegaMartin111
Submitted by Anne T on Wednesday, 01 July 2026 (640 reads)
MuseumsA Dogū from the Jōmon period, (1000–400) BCE, excavated in Kawane-Honchō Town, Shizuoka. The museum is considered the oldest national museum in Japan and collects, preserves, and displays a comprehensive collection of artwork and cultural objects from Asia, with a focus on ancient and medieval Japanese art and Asian art along the Silk Road. There is also a large collection of Greco-Buddhist art. Image submitted by Anne T
Submitted by IanMu4966 on Wednesday, 01 July 2026 (718 reads)
Multi-periodThis site served as a burial mound for the Tequesta, from circa 500 AD to perhaps as late as 1763 AD. Having been designated a park in 1926, the Pompano Beach Indian Mound is the only surviving site of its kind in urban Broward County. Image submitted by IanMu4966
Submitted by Briton1001 on Monday, 29 June 2026 (830 reads)
Date UncertainSituated on the Lythe Fell Road between Slaidburn (9.8 kms) and Bentham Great Stone of Fourstones (6.4kms). A "cross" supposedly used to stand on the site, but this is debated, some believing it to be a "Plague Stone". Image submitted by JuanBurro
Submitted by IanMu4966 on Sunday, 28 June 2026 (524 reads)
Pre-ColumbianRoughly 80 feet (24m) wide and 20 feet (6m) tall, the Spruce Bluff Mound is a remnant of the Pre-Columbian Ais Culture, who lived along the Indian River Lagoon between Cape Canaveral and the St. Lucie Inlet. The mound has been to dated to around 300–100 BC and is perhaps the largest surviving example of an Ais mound left standing today. Image submitted by IanMu4966
Submitted by Anne T on Saturday, 27 June 2026 (1267 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeA Late Neolithic tell settlement of the Tisza culture, dating to approximately 5000-4500 BCE - counted as one of the most important centres of the Late Neolithic Tisza culture. Excavations produced the famous 'Szegvar idol' (also called the 'God of Szegvar' - pictured) - a seated clay figure holding a sickle, interpreted as a harvest deity or ancestral figure, now in the Mora Ferenc Museum in Szeged. Image submitted by Anne T
Submitted by Andy B on Friday, 26 June 2026 (850 reads)
ReviewsThis book was Terence's Oxford MSc thesis in 2009 and has now in 2026 been published Open Access by the University of Buckingham Press. The sixteen years between those dates matter: they're the period in which Meaden developed the stone circle work that followed, applying the same methodology to Cork and Kerry, to northeast Scotland, and to Stonehenge. All this comparative evidence makes this Wessex study more interesting in retrospect than it could have seemed in isolation. Image submitted by Andy B
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 26 June 2026 (1084 reads)
MuseumsMuseum in Buckinghamshire - "A space to explore, learn and wonder about Bucks and to find out about the stories of people and places in this area and beyond." Image submitted by Dodomad
Visit the new SAXONS exhibition - discover the stories behind three remarkable burial sites, running until the 1st November. Also Curator Tours and lots more on Saturday 18 July, details on our page Read Article | 3 News and Comments | Category: Other Photo Pages
Submitted by Andy B on Thursday, 25 June 2026 (231881 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeNine Ladies is a typical Derbyshire stone circle consisting of nine visible small standing stones embedded in a grassed over stone rubble bank approximately 11.5m by 10.5m in diameter. The stones are all composed of local millstone grit and none are taller than one metre in height. Image submitted by Dodomad
This is a photo of Isaac Clare-Watts who was tragically discovered dead at Nine Ladies stone circle last Monday afternoon after the summer solstice. Police are appealing for witnesses and video/dashcam footage which may help catch his killer Read Article | 220 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages
Submitted by Andy B on Wednesday, 24 June 2026 (1562 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeOn a low hilltop overlooking modern Bulford, about 5km east of Stonehenge, archaeologists found a scatter of nearly fifty pits that may hold the earliest deliberately built alignment to the solstice anywhere in the Stonehenge landscape, raised perhaps five hundred years before the famous stones. The site was a place of feasting and gathering at the very dawn of the Late Neolithic, when the first earthworks at Stonehenge were new. Image submitted by Creative Commons
Nearly fifty Neolithic pits on a Bulford hilltop may hold the earliest deliberately built solstice alignment in the Stonehenge landscape, 500 years before the one at Stonehenge - I had a go at finding the proposed alignment on the currently published plan... Read Article | 3 News and Comments | Category: Image Pages
Submitted by stonetracker on Wednesday, 24 June 2026 (835 reads)
Multi-periodA US National Historical Park in San Miguel County, New Mexico which preserves the ruins of Pecos Pueblo, known historically as Cicuye, the "village of 500 warriors". The park encompasses thousands of acres of landscape infused with historical elements from prehistoric archaeological ruins to 17th and 18th century Spanish Mission churches. Image submitted by stonetracker
Submitted by Anne T on Wednesday, 24 June 2026 (1044 reads)
Natural PlacesFindings from recent cave excavations on Ingleborough have revealed new insights into the people and animals that once roamed the Yorkshire Dales, including the remains of a Bronze Age Auroch, thought to be the wild ancestor of modern cattle. Other finds revealed that some of the caves had been used as human burial sites during the Neolithic period. Image submitted by Anne T