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【慢速听力: 411探索】Laser Technology Uncovers Secrets at Stonehenge

The following article is from 红渡中学22班 Author littleflute

Laser Technology Uncovers Secrets at Stonehenge


12 March, 2013

From VOA Learning English, this is EXPLORATIONS in Special English. I'm Christopher Cruise.

And I'm Kelly Jean Kelly. Today, we report on new knowledge about Stonehenge, the famous, ancient stone circles in southern England.

Laser technology has aided scientists with their knowledge of Stonehenge, the stone monument near the city of Salisbury, England. Most of the stones at Stonehenge stand in incomplete circles. One of the largest stones weighs about 40 thousand kilograms. Some stones are more than seven meters high. Others lie broken on the ground.


Stonehenge is still a place of ceremony. Last year, Michael Johnson was photographed with the Olympic torch at the stone circle before the London Olympic Games.


The mysterious stone formation has stood on the flat, windy Salisbury Plain for perhaps five thousand years. But the organization English Heritage used modern technology to solve some of that mystery.

Recently, researchers working for English Heritage reported what they found after directing lasers at some of the stones. The lasers showed bright gray-white surfaces under material collected on the stones over the ages. And the intense light seemingly identified an ancient secret.

The uncovered surfaces appear to have been cut and shaped with a clear purpose. The researchers say the designers of Stonehenge wanted to improve the ability to see sunlight through the circles twice each year.

Some people believe the designers of Stonehenge wanted to make the best showing possible of sunlight on the longest day of the year. That day is known as the summer solstice. The designers also may have shaped stones to capture the sunset on the shortest day of the year -- the winter solstice.

The effect of the light passing through spaces between the stones has brought many people to the monument on those special days. Sometimes clouds cover the sun. But the people come anyway.

Researchers say Stonehenge's ancient "architects" placed importance on what people could see from northeast of the monument. It is thought that travelers came toward the stone circle in that direction on a path from the Avon River. The pathway is one of Stonehenge's two avenues.

The stones on the northeast side are the biggest and the most similar to each other on the monument. The southwestern part has smaller stones. The smaller ones are less alike and have not been improved like the others.

The placement of the stones raises many questions. For example, why did the builders of Stonehenge use and improve their best stones on that side? Did they think that was the most important part of the monument?

Tests with lasers also showed 71 images of axe heads. The images were carved into the stones. Researchers say the "artists" probably lived during the Early Bronze Age. That would have been about a thousand years after Neolithic people first worked on Stonehenge.

The lasers also showed graffiti and other damage done by 19th century visitors. At that time, people were permitted to remove pieces of the stones. They could pay workmen to break off pieces to take home as souvenirs.

For many years, some people believed that Stonehenge was used as an observatory for watching the skies or a place to worship the sun. Others thought the stone circles formed a calendar. But other theories are gaining support.

Researcher Mike Parker Pearson, for example, says Stonehenge was built to help unite what now is eastern and western Britain. These areas had suffered long years of conflict and battle.

Professor Parker Pearson is with the University of Sheffield. He leads a team called the Stonehenge Riverside Project. The project has been studying the stone circle and places linked to it for almost 10 years.

Professor Parker Pearson says the early people were developing a common culture. Changes in earthenware and ways of life showed that people were traveling. They were learning about cultures other than their own. But the professor's main idea about the purpose of Stonehenge is that it served as a burial ground.

Some human remains found near the stone circles show physical injury or disease. This helped lead two well-known researchers to propose that Stonehenge was a refuge or shelter for people with health problems.

Archeologists Geoffrey Wainwright and Timothy Darvill proposed that Stonehenge may have served as a place to heal the sick. Like Mike Parker Pearson, the two archeologists have worked for years to try to solve the mysteries of the circles.

The archeologists base their theory of Stonehenge's purpose partly on qualities of bluestones used at the monument. The stones are placed in a double circle with the entrance facing northeast. During the past century, the bluestones were shown to be from the Preseli Mountains in Wales. Their name comes from their color. Some people say the stones appear to be blue when they are wet or cut.

The archeologists note that some bluestones in modern Wales are still part of a healing tradition. In some places, people use water poured over the stones in an effort to cure sickness.

Archeologists Wainwright and Darvill made an important discovery at Stonehenge in 2008. They dug up about 100 pieces of organic material from where the first bluestones were placed. From this discovery, they say the bluestone circle was built about 4,300 years ago.

A number of theories have been proposed to explain how the heavy stones made their way to the Salisbury Plain. Some geologists have suggested that glaciers – huge ice formations – carried the stones. But hundreds of kilometers separate the mountains in Wales from the windy English plain.

Efforts to transport the heavy stones by boat on the river sank the boat. And attempts to row the stones across land showed that it would have taken months to move them a relatively short distance. Some experts, however, note that ancient people had lots of time and may have been more than willing to do the labor.

Another mystery is how people raised the stones to standing positions. Some weigh four tons.

One experiment used specially shaped stone balls. The balls were rolled on long pieces of wood. Each piece was cut like a rail or long bar. Professor Bruce Bradley of Exeter University reported that a demonstration using this method was successful. He said about 10 oxen could have moved as many as 10 stones a day up to 16 kilometers.

For many years, experts thought ancient people stopped using Stonehenge and the area around it perhaps 3,500 years ago. But in 2000, British scientists learned that people may have come to Stonehenge much later. They identified human remains as those of a man executed there, and used radiocarbon-dating to find the time of his death. The finding was made because of a rediscovery.

Partial skeletons, sets of bones, of many people were unearthed in the 1920s and 1930s. One skeleton was identified as that of a man who was killed near Stonehenge.

The man died when he was hit with the sharp metal edge of a sword that cut off his head. The experts say he was about 35 years old at the time of his death.

Experts say the earliest the man could have been killed was about 2,100 years ago. About that time, people in Britain first started using iron. Or the man could have been killed during a Roman invasion several hundred years later. The Roman Emperor Vespasian supposedly executed local leaders by cutting off their heads. However, the ancient man may have died hundreds of years later. He may have been killed during wars between competing English kings.

The skeleton was first discovered in 1923. A British military officer named William Hawley dug it up from inside Stonehenge's ancient circles. It was shown to the public and kept at the Royal College of Surgeons in London.

German bombs badly damaged the college during World War Two. Nineteen-thousand objects from its collection were taken to houses in the countryside for safe-keeping. They included the skeleton. After the war, it was returned to the medical school. But no one knew it was there. It was thought to have been destroyed in the bombing.

In 2000archeologist and writer Mike Pitts was working in the National History Museum in London when he discovered the remains. Mr. Pitts has since described feeling an emotional moment in the presence of the earthly remains of a person who lived – and died – so long ago. Like the mysteries of Stonehenge, the full story of the executed man probably will remain secret.

  

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【慢速听力: 214探索】 徒步穿越14个州的阿巴拉契亚山脉

【慢速听力: 213探索】 盗窃艺术品纠纷引发复杂的法律文化问题

【慢速听力:212探索】 太阳系的声音是(太空科学家的)耳中的音乐

【慢速听力:211探索】 这些现代建筑是世界奇迹(三分之三)

【慢速听力: 210探索】These Places are Natural Wonders of the World

【慢速听力:209探索】Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, Plus a Few More

【慢速听力:208探索】Protecting Native American Languages and Culture

【慢速听力: 207探索】对于艺术爱好者来说,迈阿密海滩上的艺术巴塞尔就是圣地

【慢速听力: 206探索】伊利运河:一个被人嘲笑的想法如何成为美国第一条国家水道

【慢速听力:205探索】人群的力量:设计一种从人在运动中收获电力的方法

【慢速听力: 204探索】美国民间生活中心:保存人们的声音、歌曲和故事

【慢速听力:203探索】旅行者:第一架环行世界不停的飞机

【慢速听力:202探索】 Making Soaps with a Story

#【慢速听力:201探索】 在世界各地,每两周就会消失一语言

*【慢速听力:200探索】How to Build a House With Bales of Straw

【慢速听力: 199探索】绿色节日:有目的聚会

【慢速听力: 198探索】俄亥俄州代顿国家航空名人堂荣誉飞行领袖

【慢速听力: 197探索】从玻璃中制作艺术,并通过治疗的信息塑造艺术

【慢速听力: 196探索】LaBrea焦油坑:数千年前动物生活和死亡的地方

【慢速听力:195探索】The X-15:飞机如何使NASA进入载人航天飞行之路

【慢速听力: 194探索】五件新雕塑欢迎游客参观美国印第安博物馆

【慢速听力:193探索】黄石公园:超级美丽,和一个睡眠的火山

【慢速听力: 192探索】 Dry Tortugas: 佛罗里达海岸,一个最不寻常的国家公园

【191探索】Saving Lives and Guiding Ships Along the Eastern US Coast

【慢速听力190探索】It's a Zoo Up There in Space. Make That a Galaxy Zoo

【慢速听力: 189探索】加拉帕戈斯群岛被联合国教科文组织列入濒危名单

【慢速听力: 188探索】寻找一项活动,为勇敢的心(和高地)?试着运动跳伞

【慢速听力: 187探索】空间站仍是一项正在进行中的工作,一次是一件大事

【慢速听力: 186探索】科罗拉多州的一个国家公园展示了大自然的艺术

【慢速听力: 185探索】新的世界七大奇迹在投票后宣布

【慢速听力: 184探索】 第一个独自飞越大西洋的女人Amelia Earhart, 1897-1937:

【慢速听力: 183探索】“水星13”:追逐梦想却从未成为宇航员的女人

【慢速听力: 182探索】世界最高峰登顶人数纪录

【慢速听力: 181探索】好到最后一滴:咖啡文化在美国生机勃勃

【慢速听力: 180探索】国家野生动物保护区体系:保护美国毛茸茸的朋友

【VOA慢速听力: 179探索】在400年后,是什么使莎士比亚的作品如此生机勃勃?

【VOA慢速听力: 178探索】 整个世界仍是莎士比亚永恒想象的舞台

【VOA慢速听力: 177探索】查尔斯·林德伯格(CharlesLindbergh)80年前飞往巴黎,进了历史书

【VOA慢速听力: 176探索】对火山很感兴趣?那么,一个可以四处看看的地方是夏威夷

【VOA慢速听力: 175探索】发现给巨石阵带来了新的曙光,但谜团依然存在

【VOA慢速听力: 174探索】塔斯基吉空军:第一批被训练成战斗机飞行员的非洲裔美国人

【173探索】Eleanor Creesy 帮助导航一艘有史以来建造的最快帆船之一

【172探索】探索木艺的详实历史与艺术

【171探索】欢迎来到死亡谷,一个赢得了它的名字的土地

【170探索】亚利桑那州大峡谷:走出一个真正的世界奇观

【169探索】世界各地自学成才的艺术家创造出强大而不寻常的艺术

【168探索】跳跃:伸展恐惧的极限,只是为了好玩

【167探索】国际妇女节纪念争取平等、正义、和平与发展的斗争

【166探索】胡佛大坝:控制科罗拉多河并向数百万人输送电力

【165探索】与大象对视,在非洲的Safari上观看饥饿的鳄鱼

【164探索】Press Freedom: Is It Alive and Well in the World?

【163探索】新的兴趣有助于老年人保持精神活跃,了解世界

【162探索】Learning at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.

【161探索】老年人回到大学学习新事物,重新开始

【160探索】对老年人来说,有很多机会把学习变成一种终生的活动

【159探索】对于55岁以上的人来说,世界是一个通过老年人宿舍的教室

【158探索】跨越时代的珠宝:古代艺术相遇现代之眼

【157探索】From Clay to Art: Exploring the World of Ceramics

[su]【156探索】跨历史、跨世界的版画艺术探索

【155探索】从玛雅金字塔到耶路撒冷老城再到互联网:新的“奇迹”

【154探索】两个多世纪后,莫扎特的音乐依然充满活力

【153探索】埃德温·哈勃改变了我们对宇宙及其诞生的看法

【152探索】在老西部的射手中,他们是最令人生畏的两个

【151探索】美国历史:当枪手统治狂野西部的街道时

【150探索】好好看看:从地面上了解火星

【149探索】犹他州的四个国家公园,在那里你可以找到拱门,巫术和天空中的一个岛

【148探索】利用独立法院和自由媒体打击腐败

【147探索】梦之谜

【146探索】遥远的厄里斯世界是如何在地球上引起巨变的

【145探索】海盗可能在书和电影中很受欢迎,但海盗行为仍然是一个威胁

【144探索】环顾四周,你可以在世界各地的街道上看到这种免费艺术

【143探索】妇女一直是世界各地和整个历史科学领域的领导者

【142探索】Street-Wise: Building Houses That Are Healthier for...

【141探索】Days of Apollo: Collecting Rocks, and Making History...

【140探索】'Houston, We've Had a Problem Here': The Survival of...

【139探索】'That's One Small Step ...': The Story of the First...

【138探索】Spaceflight History: Excitement and Tragedy on Road...

【137探索】1965: Two Gemini Craft Meet in Space, Another Step...

【136探索】'The Greatest Experience': Ed White Goes for the ...

【135探索】1961: Telling Mission Control 'Light This Candle,' ...

【134探索】Project Mercury: Soviet Successes Push U.S. to Build...

【133探索】Klondike Gold Rush: Stories of Riches Waiting to Be...

【132探索】Gold Rush! Thousands of People Traveled to the...

【131探索】 Visiting Seven Man-Made Wonders of the United States

【130探索】Tuskegee Airmen: The First African-Americans Trained...

【129探索】 A Place of Beautiful Extremes: Yosemite National...

【128探索】Above Ground but Under the Sea: Visiting Some...

【127探索】Carl Sagan Helped People Understand Science

【126探索】Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado: Protecting the...

【125探索】 Development Marketplace: Turning Ideas Into Action

【124探索】Venus Express Spacecraft Explores Earth's Mysterious...

【123探索】Forensic Science Is Often Used to Solve Crimes

【122探索】A Sticky Black Hole of Ancient Death, Right in the...

【121探索】Population Growth is Dropping in Industrialized...

【120探索】George Catlin Painted Native American Tribes and Their...

【119探索】George Catlin Became One of the Most Famous Artists in...

【118探索】Mysterious Creatures: Are Bigfoot and the Loch Ness...

【117探索】The Castillo de San Marcos: A Story of Ships, ...

【116探索】A Trip Along the Potomac River, One of America's Most...

【115探索】Wet and Dry, Fire and Ice: Visiting Seven of America's..

【114探索】Women Around the World Continue to Struggle for Their。。。

【113探索】 Providing Health Care for Native Communities in Mexico

【112探索】Styrofoam Stonehenge: A Full-Size Copy in a Search for..

【111探索】Nanotechnology: How the Science of the Very Small Is ...

【110探索】Let the Games Begin: Winter Olympics Start Feb. 10 in...

【109探索】International Consumer Electronics Show Presents ...

【108探索】Sustained Dialogue: Solving Conflicts Among People in...

【107探索】International Sustained Dialogue: Solving Long-Term...

【106探索】Young People Around the World Are Active in Politics

【105探索】The History of English

【104探索】Where Did the English Language Come From?

【103探索】South Street Seaport Museum Offers a Living Link With...

【102探索】The Internet and Its Future

【101探索】The Lewis and Clark Exploration: One of the Most...

【100探索】Opening the American West: Lewis and Clark and the...

【99探索】Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery Map a Nation

【98探索】 Shadow Wolves Find and Arrest People Trying to Bring...

【97探索】Carbon Monoxide Poisoning is a Silent Killer That ...

【96探索】 More Than Half of All Languages in the World Are in...

【95探索】Isaac Newton: One of History's Greatest Scientists

【94探索】America's Interstate Highway System Has Almost 70,000...

【93探索】Mauna Kea in Hawaii: Astronomy on the World's Highest...

【92探索】The National Cryptologic Museum Tells Top Secrets of...

【91探索】In an Age of Modern Science and Medicine, Infectious...

【90探索】Wiley Post: The First Pilot to Fly Around the World Alone

【89探索】World Summit in New York Will Mark 60th Anniversary of...

【88探索】Emperor Penguins Survive in World's Most Extreme Climate

【87探索】Lessons Learned From the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima...

*【86探索】VOA慢速英语听力Camping in America's National and State Parks

*【85探索】'The Big Muddy' is the longest river in the United States

【84探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 The Story of Longitude

【83探索】South Asia Continues to Recover After December Tsunami

【82探索】Lower East Side Tenement Museum Recreates Life in New ...

【81探索】Igor Sikorsky: Aircraft and Helicopter Designer

【80探索】A Visit to Two National Parks: Mount Rainier in。。。

【79探索】As Long as It Remains Profitable, Child Trafficking Will..

【78探索】One of the World’s Natural Wonders: the Grand Canyon

【77】Four Companies Working for the Common Good Instead of Profit

【76探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 The Story of Radio

【75探索】VOA慢速英语听力 The Guitar: an Instrument for Any Kind of Music

【74探索】Amelia Earhart: She Showed That Women, Too, Could Set...

【73探索】Unusual creatures live on the Galapagos Islands in the...

【72探索】VOA特别英语节目:慢速英语听力Wade Davis: Scientist, Explorer and Writer

【71探索】The Indiana Dunes: Beautiful Sand Hills and Wildlife in..

【70探索】How Robert Goddard Helped Lead America Into Space

【69探索】Around the World, Helping Victims of War and Natural...

【68探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力How the Internet Grew from a Simple Idea

【67探索】The Internet: Linking People in a Way Once Thought...

【66探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Information Age, Part 1

【65探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力SPACE DIGEST

【64探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力The Columbia River

【63探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Albert Einstein

【62探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Space Digest

【61索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力Aviation Hall of Fame

【60探索】特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Satellite Photos of Mayan Ruins

【59探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Cassini-Huygens at Titan

【58探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力The Mississippi

【57探索】特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 The National Museum of Natural History

【56探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力Space Digest

【55探索】特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Puppets Teaching Children Around the World

【54探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力The Year in Space

【53探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Wireless Internet Connection

【52探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 California Missions

【51探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Indian Museum Education Programs

【50探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Appalachian Trail

【49探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Ecotourism

【48探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Exploring Africa

【47探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Erie Canal

【46探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Running a Marathon

【45探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Children's Press Line

【44探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 National Geographic Worldwide

【43探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力   Mount Saint Helens

【42探索】美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Space Digest

【41探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Computer Software Theft

【40探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Robert Edison Fulton, Jr.

【39探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Space Digest

【38探索】 慢速英语听力 Wonders of the World, Part 3, Modern Wonders

【37探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Wonders of the World, Part 2

【36探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Wonders of the World, Part 1

【35探索】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Jacqueline Cochran

【34】 美国之音特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Yellowstone Volcano

【33】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Space Digest

【32】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Hoover Dam

【31】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Yosemite National Park

【30】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Cassini-Huygens at Saturn

【29】 慢速英语听力 San Francisco Maritime National ParkNational Park

【28】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  North Carolina Lighthouses

【27】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力   Space Digest

【26】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Volcanoes National Park

【25】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Rio Grande, Part 2

【24】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Rio Grande, Part 1

【23】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 James Doolittle

【22】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Dry Tortugas National Par

【21】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Sport Parachuting

【20】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Global Positioning System

【19】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Space Digest

【18】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Doc Holliday and the Old West

【17】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Soaring

【16】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Colorado National Monument

【15】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 The Voyager Airplane

【14】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力  Ford's Theater

【13】 美国之特别英语节目:慢速英语听力 Space Digest

【12】 La Brea Tar Pits

【11】Space Digest

【10】New Communications Technology

【9】The X- 15 Rocketplane

【8】EXPLORATIONS - Mars Exploration, Part 2 - 2004-02-03

【7】EXPLORATIONS  -  Mars Exploration, Part 1 - 2004-01-27

【6】 Who Were the Deadliest Gunmen of the Wild West?

【5】 Famous Outlaws and Gunmen of the Wild West

【4】National Air And Space Museum's Udvar-Hazy Center

【3】Songs About Summer

【2】Music Would Not Be The Same Without the Guitar

【1】On the Shoulders of Giants: Isaac Newton and Modern Science

  

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