Two weeks ago LiveScience reported the exciting discovery of a previously unknown and almost complete stone circle near Aberdeen:
https://www.livescience.com/64449-ancien...tland.html
"It really doesn't get much better than this," Ackerman said. "A lot of the recumbent stone circles that people have known about for a very long time only have two or three stones left — so to have one that is complete is quite unusual."
Several local people were familiar with the stone circle near Alford, in part, because they walked their dogs at a nearby track.
One member of a local farming family, now in her 80s, remembered seeing the stone circle at some time in the 1930s, Ackerman said. But the circle was in farmland, far from the main roads in the area, and had remained unknown to archaeologists until now, he said.
Two days ago, LiveScience reported that the former owner of the land had contacted the archaeologists to tell them he had made the circle as a hobby in the 1990s:
https://www.livescience.com/64555-ancien...plica.html
"If you are having an awkward day at work, at least you're not that guy who identified a new prehistoric stone circle to the press that now turns out to be about 20 years old," Ackerman tweeted.
https://www.livescience.com/64449-ancien...tland.html
"It really doesn't get much better than this," Ackerman said. "A lot of the recumbent stone circles that people have known about for a very long time only have two or three stones left — so to have one that is complete is quite unusual."
Several local people were familiar with the stone circle near Alford, in part, because they walked their dogs at a nearby track.
One member of a local farming family, now in her 80s, remembered seeing the stone circle at some time in the 1930s, Ackerman said. But the circle was in farmland, far from the main roads in the area, and had remained unknown to archaeologists until now, he said.
Two days ago, LiveScience reported that the former owner of the land had contacted the archaeologists to tell them he had made the circle as a hobby in the 1990s:
https://www.livescience.com/64555-ancien...plica.html
"If you are having an awkward day at work, at least you're not that guy who identified a new prehistoric stone circle to the press that now turns out to be about 20 years old," Ackerman tweeted.