logo
Stonehenge-like circle unearthed in Denmark may have links to UK

Stonehenge-like circle unearthed in Denmark may have links to UK

The Guardian26-02-2025

An 'extraordinary' timber circle believed to be thousands of years old and connected to Stonehenge in England has been discovered in the ground in Denmark.
The circle of at least 45 wooden posts in Aars, North Jutland, has a diameter of about 30 metres and is believed to have been constructed between 2600 and 1600BC.
The 'woodhenge', the second to be found in the area, was discovered in January during excavation of the site.
Experts say the find shows how widespread shared belief systems were and the close connection between Denmark and England.
Sidsel Wåhlin, a curator at Vesthimmerlands Museum, who came across the holes while taking off the topsoil with the excavation leader, Andreas Bo Nielsen, said: 'It is an extraordinary find.'
At first she thought it was a line of post holes, then Wåhlin discovered it formed the shape of a circle. 'I was like: 'Oh my God, a timber circle, there is just no other explanation.''
The circle, which was not visible in aerial photography archives, offered insights into the rituals and social structures of the late stone age and early bronze age, she said.
Britain and Ireland have dozens of henges – round earthen enclosures, some featuring stones or timber posts, such as Stonehenge and nearby Woodhenge – remaining from 3000BC to 2000BC.
'They are ritual centres and sites that are connected with the worship of the sun and the agricultural ritual practices of the time,' Wåhlin said. 'In order to decide to make such a specific monument you have to understand what it means and how to plan it.'
The newly discovered Danish woodhenge appeared to have a similar axis as England's Stonehenge and Woodhenge, she said. 'It shows us that they are sharing the same worldviews on large-scale areas on how to be farmers, how society connects with the supernatural.
'Building monuments on this scale, you need to understand why and how. If a British person from the time would have come to the site they would have known what they are doing in there.'
They are waiting for the results of wood samples but the posts are most likely to have been made from oak. The team hopes to do genetic testing to see if there are any DNA connections between the site and the UK or other parts of Europe.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China unveils mosquito-sized stealth operation drone as UK 'prepares for war'
China unveils mosquito-sized stealth operation drone as UK 'prepares for war'

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

China unveils mosquito-sized stealth operation drone as UK 'prepares for war'

A tiny 2cm-long drone used for 'special missions on the battlefield' has been unveiled by Chinese scientists - while the Prime Minister has warned of how technology could embolden an attack on UK soil China has unveiled a futuristic mosquito-sized drone on the same week the British government warned that rapidly advancing technology is 'transforming the nature of war'. The tiny flying device - developed by the National University of Defence Technology (NUDT) in China 's Hunan province - is designed for "covert" military operations, and marks the latest war-ready device shown off by Beijing. Modelled after a mosquito, it has two wings, a black body, and three hair-thin legs, allowing it to carry out "special missions on the battlefield" without being detected. Researchers from the university showed off the gadget this week alongside a host of other robots, including humanoid machines and tiny drones, on state-run media. ‌ ‌ The mosquito drone is just two centimetres (0.7in) long and 3cm wide (1.18in), weighing less than 0.2 grams. Another prototype of the device, which had four wings, appeared to be controlled via a smartphone. Explaining how it could be deployed in battle, Liang Hexiang, a student at NUDT, told CCTV: 'Here in my hand is a mosquito-like type of robot. Miniature bionic robots like this one are especially suited to information reconnaissance and special missions on the battlefield.' China has invested heavily in the use of AI-powered gadgets for military purposes, and plans to introduce the largest drone carrier in the world by the end of this month. The 'drone mothership' will being able to launch huge swarms of 'kamikaze' devices upon enemy targets. It comes after Keir Starmer warned that Britons must prepare for possibility of an attack on our own soil amid high tensions on the international stage. Speaking this week as he unveiled the UK's National Security Strategy, the Prime Minister said: "Russian aggression menaces our continent. Strategic competition is intensifying. Extremist ideologies are on the rise. Technology is transforming the nature of both war and domestic security. Hostile state activity takes place on British soil." One part of the 53-page document, authored by the Government, tells of how "adversaries are laying the foundations for future conflict, positioning themselves to move quickly to cause major disruption to our energy and or supply chains, to deter us from standing up to their aggression. It adds: "For the first time in many years, we have to actively prepare for the possibility of the UK homeland coming under direct threat, potentially in a wartime scenario." China was identified as a particular potential threat as the country tries to devlope AI capability allowing them to release 'swarms' of drones in an attack. With the right programming these would be extremely difficult to shoot down or disable if they flew in overwhelming numbers, controlled by artificial intelligence responding at lightning speed.

Bat with extremely rare rabies-causing virus found on UK island
Bat with extremely rare rabies-causing virus found on UK island

Daily Mirror

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Bat with extremely rare rabies-causing virus found on UK island

The injured bat rescued from a back garden in Shorwell on the Isle of Wight was found to have an extremely rare rabies-like virus, according to the Department of Environment and Rural Affairs An extremely rare rabies-like virus has been detected in the UK after an injured bat was rescued from a back garden. The resident wore gloves when they picked up the creature and put it in a shoebox overnight at their home in Shorwell on the Isle of Wight. The following day, volunteers from the Isle of Wight Bat Hospital took it away. ‌ The Department for Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra) says the bat was found to have been infected with a virus that caused rabies. An investigation was launched by the Animal, Plant and Health Agency (APHA) which found no scratches or bites to humans or animals. ‌ In the UK, there are two types of viruses that cause rabies in bats. They are European Bat Lyssavirus-1 (EBLV-1) and European Bat Lyssavirus-2 (EBLV-2). This bat was found to have the former. The UK is considered a rabies free country, and Defra stressed this discovery does not change its classification. The Bat Conservation Trust said that while the bat-borne EBLVs do carry the virus, it's not the version usually transmitted through dogs - which is responsible for most of the world's cases. Alex Morss, from the trust, said: "Rabies-related viruses have only ever been recorded in less than 0.3% of all bats tested since 1986 (59 bats of 19,000 tested), and in only two of the 18 bat species present in the UK, the serotine bat and the Daubenton's bat." She added: "There have only been two recorded cases of rabies viruses from an infected wild British animal in a human in Britain since records began - One case was in 1902, the other case was in 2002." ‌ EBLV-1 was first detected in Dorset in Serotine bats in 2018, the APHA said, with 34 cases reported in the UK as of May 2024. Alex told the BBC that anyone suspected to have been bitten, licked, or scratched by a bat should seek medical advice and reach out to the National Bat Helpline on 0345 1300 228. The NHS states that people exposed to the virus can be cured if they receive a vaccination soon after infection. ‌ "There is no risk to human health if you do not handle British bats, even if they are roosting in buildings you use," Alex said. "No action should be taken to disturb or harm any wild bats or their roosts. Bats are non-aggressive, shy mammals and will avoid contact with humans." Bats should only be handled by trained and licensed professionals unless it's a bat in distress that needs rescuing. Should you find an injured bat, it's essential to use thick gloves and a face mask or covering. All 18 species of bats in Britain, and the roosts they live in, are protected by law.

The Half-Life of Marie Curie
The Half-Life of Marie Curie

Time Out

time4 days ago

  • Time Out

The Half-Life of Marie Curie

On my seven-month-old baby's bookshelf sits a brightly illustrated children's book about Marie Curie. Its pages celebrate her love of science, her marriage to physicist Pierre Curie, and her status as the first woman to win a Nobel Prize. These are the facts most often recited, but women are rarely one-dimensional. Alongside moments of triumph, often lie moments of despair and self-doubt. It is one of those lesser-known chapters that Lauren Gunderson explores in The Half-Life of Marie Curie, a play that premiered off-Broadway at the Minetta Lane Theatre in 2019, and was later released as an audio drama on the Audible platform. The play now makes its Australian premiere at Sydney's Ensemble Theatre under the direction of Liesel Badorrek (The Glass Menagerie). Gunderson, frequently referred to as 'the most produced living playwright in America', has a signature formula across her 20-plus plays: identify a compelling duo, hone in on a pivotal historical moment, inject sharp, rhythmic dialogue, and keep it snappy – 90 minutes or less. The result is a biographical vignette interspersed with theatrical poetry. The plays often just recount history – however, at its best, her formula can thrillingly heighten a core emotional conflict. In this case, it's the friendship between Marie Curie and Hertha Ayrton, and the impact these women had on each other. Though often relegated to a footnote in Curie's story, here Ayrton commands center stage... The narrative begins at Curie's (Gabrielle Scawthorn) home in Paris, shortly after she wins her second Nobel Prize, amid personal scandal. Her affair with fellow scientist Paul Langevin has ignited a media frenzy, threatening to overshadow her legacy and forcing her into self-imposed house arrest. Enter Hertha Ayrton (Rebecca Massey), a mathematician and engineer, who quite literally bursts through the door of Curie's exile and whisks her off to the British seaside. There they frolic, quarrel, and find themselves in each other. Despite its title, The Half-Life of Marie Curie seems more captivated by the woman history barely remembers – Hertha Ayrton –than the woman it promises to center. Though often relegated to a footnote in Curie's story, here Ayrton commands center stage: sassy, witty, progressive, a suffragist, and the persistent voice on Curie's shoulder declaring how extraordinary she is. Massey has all the best lines, crafting a performance that's physical, sharp, and full of warmth and joy. She's the best friend everyone wants – the kind who shows up, speaks truth, and doesn't let you drown. Through Ayrton, Gunderson poses the play's most potent questions: What makes someone become themselves? And what makes them worth saving? These are big, existential inquiries – about art, science, nature – that, while thematically rich, don't always sit comfortably within Curie's historical context. As a result, Curie is too often sidelined, reduced to a figure of gloom. She is the catalyst for the audience to hear Ayrton's worldview, rather than the other way around. Gunderson's Marie feels like a faint sketch of the scientific titan that I came to revere during my university physics studies. Here, she is made small. On one hand, there's something refreshing about seeing a woman of such legendary stature portrayed as fallible – torn by heartbreak, plagued by self-doubt, unsure of how to move forward. But this portrayal lingers on it a bit too long. This take on Curie is stuck in a single emotional register: brooding, passive, and more consumed by rejection than inflamed by the institutional sexism that shut her out of her own lab. The result is a character who feels diminished to her worst summer. To her credit, Scawthorn brings depth where she can. She infuses Curie's desperation with stakes that feel novel, nuanced and grounded. But she's let down by this production. The staging relies on ethereal video projections cast onto sheer curtains, encircling a central dais (perhaps a nod to Ayrton's work on arc lamps). But the effect is more clinical than intimate. The bulky wooden platform limits movement and undercuts the unpolished banter of the relationship at the play's heart. Aside from a hilarious, engaging drunken reconciliation atop the dais, the physicality seems cumbersome, and there is very little visual variety to enhance the emotional arc. The lighting by Verity Hampson and video projections by Cameron Smith bring to life the theatrical poetry elements that effectively bridge the show's time jumps, and create visually captivating moments. Is this the first woman to win a Nobel Prize? Or a damsel in distress? The portrayal leans so hard into her mediocrity, it risks erasing her fire altogether. That said, perhaps Gunderson is intent on proving she was just as ordinary as you or I, so that we may feel that we can also do great things. Ultimately, it's Massey's Ayrton who anchors the play. She is the rambunctious spark – jibing, compassionate, insistent – and she transforms Curie's despair into something bigger. Even when the text falters or the staging feels distant, she keeps the light on and the laughs rolling.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store