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seems like they found some stuff nearby and attribute the build based on proximity / estimated time-line? how hard is such evidence to suggest it was really them who built it? any comments?
Apparently not even that. Tfa says they just analyzed remains from what they estimate is a similar time period as what they estimate stonehenge to be. Not even local to the site. While some inferences can be drawn, this is mostly puff.
I think the article was written in a bigger archeological context in which relative genetic homogeneity was established for within the Mesolithic,Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods.
Exactly. There is no proof that the people whose remains are found, were the builders.

Putting into the title '.. origin of the builders' appears to be a fabrication by BBC.

The abstract of the referenced article in the scientific journal does not support the BBC's fabrication.

"...

We find overwhelming support for agriculture being introduced to Britain by incoming continental farmers, with small, geographically structured levels of hunter-gatherer ancestry. Unlike other European Neolithic populations, we detect no resurgence of hunter-gatherer ancestry at any time during the Neolithic in Britain. Genetic affinities with Iberian Neolithic individuals indicate that British Neolithic people were mostly descended from Aegean farmers who followed the Mediterranean route of dispersal. We also infer considerable variation in pigmentation levels in Europe by circa 6000 bc....

"

What is amusing is that Scots myths claim that we came from Scythia - from the Declaration of Arbroath (1320):

"we know and from the chronicles and books of the ancients wefind that among other famous nations our own, the Scots, has been graced with widespread renown. It journeyed from Greater Scythia by way of the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Pillars of Hercules, and dwelt for a long course of time in Spain among the most savage peoples, but nowhere could it be subdued by any people, however barbarous. Thence it came, twelve hundred years after the people of Israel crossed the Red Sea, to its home in the west where it still lives today."

NB Yes, I know Stonehenge isn't in Scotland but some of the earliest Stone Circles are apparently in Orkney.

The Irish Book of Conquests (Lebor Gabála Érenn) tells a similar story - in fact I'd guess that's where the Scotch origin myth comes from:

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebor_Gab%C3%A1la_%C3%89renn

The original Scots (who went on to subsumed the other parts of what is now Scotland) were from Ireland:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%A1l_Riata

Their 'capital' at Dunadd is quite cool - I've stood with my boot in the famous footprint - alhough I don't think that's enough to be King of Scots:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunadd

The original Inhabitants of Scotland pre-date the Irish Gaelic speakers who now live on the fringe of Scotland and are so called Highlanders
Well, the same thing can actually be said of Ireland itself. The cohort of Q-Celtic speakers who brought their language and culture weren't all that big. Lebor Gabála Érenn might be a pseudo-history, but it's surprising how closely it jives to the history we _do_ know.
I always thought the origins of Scotch was monks brewing it. Never realized there was a mythology there
I believe jajag was using the "Scotch origin myth" to refer to the Scottish people/culture, as opposed to the drink.
It's a moderately offensive term to use for people, though.
Yeah I was using the term to refer to the Scottish and things Scottish but according to Wikipedia [1] the term nowadays does have mildly negative connotations which I was completely unaware of, so you learn something new every day.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch_(adjective)

I believe jajag is referring to the tape that holds things together as opposed to the drink.
Similarly, Snorri Sturlson writing in the 13th century explained that the Norse gods - Odin and that lot - were all actually refugees from Troy as it was sacked by Agamemnon.

https://bladehoner.wordpress.com/2017/11/16/snorris-ancestra...

Sounds like someone appropriated the Aeneid to their local gods!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeneid

Edit: Of course the Scots/Irish origin myths might be an even vaguer retelling of the same story.

I believe that genetic analysis has shown that blue eyes trace their origin to a person who lived in modern day Turkey. So who knows...
But the people the article speaks of were in turn displaced by other people some millennium later. Which in itself does not invalidate the Scots myth, I don't know where the second wave came from originally, the article doesn't say.
It does say: from central Europe. Who themselves came from around north of the Caucasus Yamnaya/Maykop (not in article)
The article also said that this population about 1000-2000 years later was also completely displaced.
The Scythians occupied the West Central Asian steppe, which is where the Proto-Indo-Europeans originated around 5000BC. Yamnaya and Steppe Hunter Gatherer DNA averages around 30-40% in the British isles, so this folktale isn't completely inaccurate.
In context of the article, I think the parent's argument is this folktale is remarkably accurate.
It's fascinating that various Irish, Scottish and (I think, but not sure) Welsh legends make a similar eastern origin claim.

Over the last generation, we've had a bunch of what was assumed to be fiction confirmed. Eric the red's voyage and viking visits to North America. All sorts of very old biblical narratives are being confirmed, the existence of early iron age kings and conflicts, for example, are being confirmed by archeology. Troy, and the possible historical conflict with the Greek aegeans... Also from the bronze)iron age transition period.

It's like a swing. Modern historians worked hard to get rid of all the bible-based histories. A few generations later, the Bible (and lots of other old books and oral traditions) is a surprisingly reliable source... as are folk legends.

Noah's flood is as legitimate as it has been for 100 years. Searching for Atlantis is as non-crazy as it has been for even longer. Some aboriginal Australian oral histories are now thought (by some) to be incomprehensibly, mind boggingly old...

I'm still hoping for confirmation of at Brendan the voyager.

> Modern historians worked hard to get rid of all the bible-based histories. A few generations later, the Bible (and lots of other old books and oral traditions) is a surprisingly reliable source... as are folk legends.

Do you have a source for that? My undergrad education is in history, and I am not aware of any attempt to get rid of bible-based histories. Are there attempts to look at the actual historicity of the events and to place them in their appropriate context? Absolutely, but there's no attempt to simply get rid of the histories.

I can’t provide one, but maybe I can deduce what the author was trying to say.

Religion obviously causes biases, and those biases could inhibit scientific process.

In popular culture, most people think of scientists as atheists and that they try to disprove one side vs. comparing them in an unbiased fashion.

That's making a lot of assumptions about the nature of historical research. I believe people are mistaking "trying to find other evidence for claims" as being synonymous with "trying to get rid of".

When you put the authors of the bible in their historical context many are removed via proximity or time from the actual events described (for instance, Paul didn't know Jesus before his crucifixion, the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John were all written 60-110 years later), and so there's is going to be a search for primary sources that corroborate what was said.

Correct. I mistakenly said author, and was referring dalbasal’s comment.

My point was that people (on both sides of this issue) do mistake fact checking with agenda when it comes to religion because of the polarizing nature of the topic.

I don't know about generalizations across all "modern historians" but Biblical Minimalism (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_minimalism) was a big trend in near Eastern archaeology. They had/have legit criticism of how modern definitions/attitudes taint our interpretation of the archaeological record.

But...ultimately, that view ignores that many of the places (and even some of the people) of the Biblical narrative from the 9th century BCE seem to roughly match the archeological record.

And even before that the record is simply incomplete or mixed, rather than directly contradicting the Biblical era of prophets and early kings.

For example, at the Elah Fortress site (10th century BC), there were no pig bones (unlike Philistine sites) and a fragmentary inscription that at least resembles the Israelite culture depicted by the Bible:

1 you shall not do [it], but worship (the god) [El] 2 Judge the sla[ve] and the wid[ow] / Judge the orph[an] 3 [and] the stranger. [Pl]ead for the infant / plead for the po[or and] 4 the widow. Rehabilitate [the poor] at the hands of the king 5 Protect the po[or and] the slave / [supp]ort the stranger.

This isn't evidence for the Bible (which makes lots of other unprovable magical claims) but rather evidence that parts of the Bible do accurately convey information about an ancient society.

I'm not well versed in archaeology by any means, but based upon that Wikipedia article it seems to be a school of thought arguing that the old testament can't necessarily be treated as a primary source of truth - we already know that when we compare and contrast the stories in Kings Vs Chronicles, they were clearly written by different people at different times with different agendas, and the facts in each don't agree. They may be both representing some similar baseline truth, but they are looking through different lenses. This comes back to having to try and interpret the stories of the bible in their historical (or in this case archaeological) contexts.

All that being said, I'm pretty sure we agree with eachother.

> the Bible (and lots of other old books and oral traditions) is a surprisingly reliable source...

Going to need a source for that.

> Noah's flood is as legitimate as it has been for 100 years

To an extent. 95%+ of the story is false, apart from there (probably) was a big flood. But the majority if the story is false.

As with most of the stories in the bible, they tied them into some real events to ground them to the people, to myths of the age, then wove into them a fantasy story perhaps with enough grounding to reality to state "based on a true story", but probably not even that

I personally wouldn't have used the Bible as an example, but...

I too am impressed that so many old folk tales/myths/legends have recently been found to have a basis of reality.

I mean, the way I see it:

There are stories from a decade ago 'based on a true story' and if you look at our modern 'myths', like a movie based on a true story, generally they are very loosely based on the true story.

And that is with our modern ability to document and review what happened in the past.

These stories were oral tradition for hundreds of years before being written.

The fact that they have any basis left is amazing and a testament to the powerful events that resonated through history. It's a testament to the ability of humans to pass on information in a uni directional time dimension.

* I'm completely non-religious.

> I too am impressed that so many old folk tales/myths/legends have recently been found to have a basis of reality.

Why wouldn't they? You're going to want to pass on interesting stories. And what other means would they have had to transfer knowledge if not through oral tradition? It would have been the only available medium. The stories deemed interesting or important would have been the way people would have entertained each other.

The other thing to keep in mind is that with these stories we can suffer from historical pareidolia - where if the parts of the story fit the truth just enough we assume that must be the basis. I don't know if that's always the case.

Why wouldn't they is already in my first post: play broken phone in school and see what I mean. 400 years = 20 generations. How accurate is the retelling of things that happened just 5 or 10 years ago... and for which pictures, books and video exist for evidence? We are in the post modern era where we have to make distinctions like personal truth and objective truth.

Amazement comes when reality exceeds expectations.

If this isn't just the case of pareidolia or cherry picking data:

It seems I see maintaining an oral history that retains any connection to reality over hundreds of years as amazing.

That is because I see human communication as highly flawed, even in today's day where recording and reproduction are easy. Also, think of education; how much more standardized and advanced it is today and still people have a hard time passing things on accurately.

Some people think of human communication as less flawed than I do. So I guess there would be no amazement for them.

> Why wouldn't they is already in my first post: play broken phone in school and see what I mean.

Broken phone is you listening to a message whispered once to you, and there's always a jerk in the middle who changes the story to something totally different. These stories would have been told to you over and over again until you know it by heart. They would naturally get embellished, and that's what we see - floods cover the earth men become gods, mountain peaks become heaven.

It's also important to note that, while we don't know events from 5 to 10 years ago off by heart, we all remember where we were when 9/11 happened - those are the sorts of events that would have been passed down. And really, all we get out of these stories is the equivalent to "9/11 happened" - many of the stories lose all other details.

For instance, there's a general consensus that Noah's Ark is based upon a flood myth shared by many different cultures is drawn from a Mesopotamian precursors, and seems to stem from ~2000 BCE. There are a bunch of retellings with a bunch of different details - there's heroes and gods, but the water varies from "killing everything on Earth" to "a river flooding", and was due to sin, or overpopulation, or just the caprices of the Gods.

That does sound like what would happen if you were playing telephone.

Again, reality - expectations = our reaction to what we see.

You seem to feel your version of expectations are better tuned so that when we subtract them from reality it is what you expected.

I see this as amazing. Again, that has to be because I see human communication more flawed than you do. And that is fine. Personally, I think you do a lot of hand waving when you say something like "there's always a jerk in the middle who changes the story to something totally different" and then just outright ignore that when talking about oral tradition maintenance. Especially when you consider wars, famine, mass migrations, etc.

But alas, it's different expectations and and given that you aren't amazed, your expectations are apparently more accurate (as long as those expectations were truly held before the proof was shown)

>"there's always a jerk in the middle who changes the story to something totally different" and then just outright ignore that when talking about oral tradition //

We actually have some confirmations where oral traditions weren't bawdlerised in Judaeo-Christian history -- if you look at how they adopted a system of rewarding verity (as Muslims do now, with learning their scripture by rote) then you can see how separated populations maintained the same stories, in the same form, without alteration of major factual points.

https://www.sapiens.org/column/curiosities/dead-sea-scrolls-... read from "When I entered graduate school".

> As with most of the stories in the bible, they tied them into some real events to ground them to the people, to myths of the age, then wove into them a fantasy story perhaps with enough grounding to reality to state "based on a true story", but probably not even that

To the extent that the bible is inaccurate, it's certainly less a conspiracy to mislead and more a gradual loss of accuracy due to being passed down generations orally before eventually being written down.

EDIT: I’m perplexed that this is a controversial opinion. What evidence is there that supports a conspiracy explanation?

It's obviously debatable - but we know that there was a huge flood at the end of the Ice age that would have raised the sea level considerably in a relatively short period. This is about 12,500 years ago. There is also evidence in India, and in the Indian ocean, for civilisation there at that time. And finally that particular myth of a huge flood is found in pretty much every culture.

So maybe there was a guy called Noah, maybe there wasn't. But I strongly suspect there was an actual world wide flood within the mythic memory of our species.

I expect some time since we began using speech to tell stories there was something considered to be a great flood somewhere. Either that's true or you've got a Russell's teapot situation anyways.

In both cases it doesn't make the story of Noah's ark true.

C'mon, the Bible is the book of grossly exaggerated stories for moralistic purposes to be charitable. Yeah the authors referred to things that might have happened but they are as reliable as my 4yo retelling his day.
Sounds like a well-read (in both the Bible and History) point /s
What part of that sentence makes you think I don't know either? Would you say the Bible is particularly accurate or reliable as an historical source or are you accusing my son of being a reliable narrator?
Was reading recently about viking trips to North America (c 1100 AD?), which they surprising called Vinland. Grapes are not viable in north eastern Canada, which indicates that they traveled quite far south.

Unless of course, like Greenland and Iceland, the naming was a marketing ploy.

It's my impression that the vikings were operating some logging camps in North America, so a marketing ploy to get more laborers seems plausible.
vine grape apple melon where/are all just words for 'fruit' at some stage / in some dialect.
Searching for Atlantis is as non-crazy as it has been for even longer.

I'm pretty sure that Atlantis was found a long time ago.

As https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Location_hypotheses_of_Atlanti... summarizes, the historical evidence of Atlantis is in Plato. And if we assume an easy to make factor of 10 misreading of Egyptian hieroglyphs, Plato's description fits the known destruction of Minoan civilization by the Theran volcano.

Yeah, not as glamorous as space aliens. But it fits all known evidence, including archeological.

I recently watched a video[0] that tried to make the case that the neolithic invasion into Britain around 4,000 BC came from Doggerland. It seemed somewhat speculative (and its author is honest about that), but not a complete crackpot theory either. I wonder what the current scholarship is on the neolithic invasion in Britain (and in Europe in general), and also on who lived in Doggerland.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvOcK4wfIHo

New England (United States) has miles and miles of ancient and undocumented rock walls which rival the ancient walls of Ireland and are largely ignored by scientist.
Would love to read more about this, if you have references...
Most of the literature attributes the walls to early settlers and colonists. The vast amount of walls especially in places that were never settled makes this hypothesis wrong and outright misleading. Some walls were created by colonists but you would need millions and millions to make all the walls in this region.

The early colonists were substitance farmers and there are no journals or diaries or documents which talk about building walls.

They do have diaries of farming and painting and all other topics but not building walls up mountains and sprawling over legde and landscapes.

What if there were people in the Americas before the colonists!

What if the colonists occupied the land those people had farmed!

I'm from New England and this is something I've never heard of before. It seems like it should be fairly easy to tell whether a stone wall is ancient or just from the time of the settlers, so without further references I'm fairly skeptical.
The stone walls in New England are not ancient, they're from early settlers who cut down the forests and created pastures and farmland. The soil in New England is very rocky, so tilling it produced lots of rocks. The rocks were used to create walls to demarcate property lines. Now that the forests have regrown, there are many forgotten/disused stone walls deep in the woods, but they were originally put there by farmers.

Edit: I'd add that these stone walls are still used by surveyors, especially when the historical records may be spotty, but also just because they in many cases happen to still fall along existing property lines. There _are_ a few "ancient" stone sites in New England of disputed origin, including "Mystery Hill" (also known as "America's Stonehenge"). But there is a strong argument to be made that these were constructed by modern Americans as hoaxes.

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Most of the literature attributes the walls to early settlers and colonists. The vast amount of walls especially in places that were never settled makes this hypothesis wrong and outright misleading. Some walls were created by colonists but you would need millions and millions to make _all_ the walls in this region with in a time span of 150-300 years.

It's simply impossible for the farmers to have built all the walls, even if thats all they did was build walls all day every day for generations.

The early colonists were sustenance farmers and there are no journals or diaries or documents which talk about them building walls.

I don't write that much about making excel spreadsheets. I'd assume that when they stumbled over a rock they put it on the side of their field, arranging it to a wall. They might have just wrote down "field work" in diaries (if they had the time to write).
You don't write about spreadsheets, but if we look at the library or the internet we can see that at least one person writes about spreadsheets.

There is not one piece of written evidence that the colonists created all the walls. There is not one piece of written evidence that the native Americans built the walls.

We don't know who built the walls.

You're grossly exaggerating the effort involved in moving stones from soil you've tilled and laying them in a straight line across a field. This isn't masonry. It's literally a pile of rocks.