Silbury Hill The steep sides and flat top of Silbury Hill may be newer than thought Silbury Hill acquired its distinctive shape in more modern times, according to new archaeological evidence. It is traditionally thought that the hill, with its steep banks and flat top, was conceived and completed in pre-historic times. But new research presented in a new book suggests the final shape was a late Anglo-Saxon innovation. Read more
How? Who? Why? From Agatha Christie to Dan Brown, all the best thriller writers know the value of leaving these questions dangling until the last page. But at least we discover the answers in the end. If mankind endures ten million years we may never discover the who and why of the most tantalising enigma in the British landscape. No, not Stonehenge. That jumbo-sized sundial may still retain an awesome aura of mystery, but its makers left dozens of clues as to its function. Im talking about the vast monument a few miles north Silbury Hill, the 500,000-tonne mound of chalk and turf that our Neolithic ancestors spent an estimated four million man-hours constructing, for reasons that have been totally obliterated by the march of millennia. After 4,300 years, Silbury is in the news again. Last week experts from English Heritage, using pioneering tunnelling technology from the engineering company Skanska, reached its centre, 40 metres beneath the summit. Their primary purpose was not archaeology but preservation.