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Science & HealthThursday, June 18, 2026

Stonehenge’s Wooden Predecessor Found, Alongside Fire and Migration Clues

A wooden precursor to Stonehenge, evidence of fire use nearly two million years ago, and ancient occupation in Sulawesi collectively challenge linear narratives of human development.

Archaeologists working just five kilometres east of Stonehenge have uncovered what they believe to be a direct wooden prototype of the world-famous stone circle, predating its construction by roughly 500 years. The discovery, made near the village of Bulford in Wiltshire, consists of two large pits that once held massive timber posts, set 120 metres apart and precisely aligned with the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset. Radiocarbon dating places the structure at around 5,000 years old, making it the earliest known monumental solar alignment in the British Isles. Viewed from London, the find fundamentally alters the timeline of ritual landscape development on Salisbury Plain, suggesting that sun worship was not an innovation of the megalithic builders but a deeply rooted practice that later found its most enduring expression in stone.

While the Bulford pits rewrite the prehistory of Britain, separate discoveries on two other continents are similarly complicating long-held assumptions about early human capabilities. In South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave, microscopic bone fragments subjected to novel spectroscopy techniques have revealed exposure to heat between 1.07 and 1.79 million years ago. Analysts in Johannesburg note that the evidence does not prove controlled fire-making, but it strongly indicates that early hominins were carrying fire into the cave’s deep interior, interacting with it in a “quieter, more complicated” manner than previously imagined. This pushes the timeline of sustained fire interaction far deeper into the Pleistocene, challenging the notion that mastery of flame was a sudden, revolutionary leap.

Meanwhile, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, excavations at Leang Bulu Bettue have yielded a near-continuous record of occupation stretching back over 200,000 years. Stone tools and butchery marks on animal bones, dated between 132,300 and 208,400 years ago, confirm a human presence well before the generally accepted arrival of Homo sapiens in the region. Researchers in Southeast Asia interpret the sequence as evidence that multiple hominin species—perhaps including the enigmatic Denisovans—inhabited the island, overlapping and replacing one another in a pattern that defies any simple, linear migration story.

Taken together, these three findings from disparate corners of the globe illustrate a broader shift in archaeological thinking. The Stonehenge prototype reveals that monumental solar observation was an evolving tradition, not a singular stroke of genius. The Wonderwerk Cave data suggest that fire was a companion to human ancestors for far longer than the controlled-use paradigm allows. And the Sulawesi cave underscores that the human family tree was a tangled thicket of coexisting and successive populations. As excavation techniques grow more refined and dating methods more precise, the past is emerging not as a neat sequence of breakthroughs but as a messy, protracted process of experimentation, overlap, and gradual refinement—a narrative that demands constant recalibration from scholars and the public alike.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

44%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressRussian & CIS press
Latin American press
TriumphPragmatism

In Mexico, a pre-Hispanic platform with circular stones and a monolithic sculpture bearing Maya features has been unearthed in Veracruz. The unprecedented find on the Gulf Coast sheds new light on ancient solar worship and rewrites the history of Mesoamerican ceremonial practices.

Russian & CIS press/ State
DetachmentPragmatism

A 5000-year-old wooden structure aligned to the solstices has been found a few kilometres from Stonehenge. Archaeologists view it as a possible prototype of the famous stone circle, predating it by half a millennium.

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Upd. 08:10 PM2 languages · 4 outlets
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4 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Thursday, June 18, 2026

Stonehenge’s Wooden Predecessor Found, Alongside Fire and Migration Clues

A wooden precursor to Stonehenge, evidence of fire use nearly two million years ago, and ancient occupation in Sulawesi collectively challenge linear narratives of human development.

Archaeologists working just five kilometres east of Stonehenge have uncovered what they believe to be a direct wooden prototype of the world-famous stone circle, predating its construction by roughly 500 years. The discovery, made near the village of Bulford in Wiltshire, consists of two large pits that once held massive timber posts, set 120 metres apart and precisely aligned with the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset. Radiocarbon dating places the structure at around 5,000 years old, making it the earliest known monumental solar alignment in the British Isles. Viewed from London, the find fundamentally alters the timeline of ritual landscape development on Salisbury Plain, suggesting that sun worship was not an innovation of the megalithic builders but a deeply rooted practice that later found its most enduring expression in stone.

While the Bulford pits rewrite the prehistory of Britain, separate discoveries on two other continents are similarly complicating long-held assumptions about early human capabilities. In South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave, microscopic bone fragments subjected to novel spectroscopy techniques have revealed exposure to heat between 1.07 and 1.79 million years ago. Analysts in Johannesburg note that the evidence does not prove controlled fire-making, but it strongly indicates that early hominins were carrying fire into the cave’s deep interior, interacting with it in a “quieter, more complicated” manner than previously imagined. This pushes the timeline of sustained fire interaction far deeper into the Pleistocene, challenging the notion that mastery of flame was a sudden, revolutionary leap.

Meanwhile, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, excavations at Leang Bulu Bettue have yielded a near-continuous record of occupation stretching back over 200,000 years. Stone tools and butchery marks on animal bones, dated between 132,300 and 208,400 years ago, confirm a human presence well before the generally accepted arrival of Homo sapiens in the region. Researchers in Southeast Asia interpret the sequence as evidence that multiple hominin species—perhaps including the enigmatic Denisovans—inhabited the island, overlapping and replacing one another in a pattern that defies any simple, linear migration story.

Taken together, these three findings from disparate corners of the globe illustrate a broader shift in archaeological thinking. The Stonehenge prototype reveals that monumental solar observation was an evolving tradition, not a singular stroke of genius. The Wonderwerk Cave data suggest that fire was a companion to human ancestors for far longer than the controlled-use paradigm allows. And the Sulawesi cave underscores that the human family tree was a tangled thicket of coexisting and successive populations. As excavation techniques grow more refined and dating methods more precise, the past is emerging not as a neat sequence of breakthroughs but as a messy, protracted process of experimentation, overlap, and gradual refinement—a narrative that demands constant recalibration from scholars and the public alike.

Source divergence

Science & Health · 4 outlets · 2 languages

44%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable67%
Neutral33%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressRussian & CIS press
Latin American press
TriumphPragmatism

In Mexico, a pre-Hispanic platform with circular stones and a monolithic sculpture bearing Maya features has been unearthed in Veracruz. The unprecedented find on the Gulf Coast sheds new light on ancient solar worship and rewrites the history of Mesoamerican ceremonial practices.

Russian & CIS press/ State
DetachmentPragmatism

A 5000-year-old wooden structure aligned to the solstices has been found a few kilometres from Stonehenge. Archaeologists view it as a possible prototype of the famous stone circle, predating it by half a millennium.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 2 languages

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