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A male skeleton found interred nearby is believed to be that of a younger man related to the Archer, as they shared a rare hereditary anomaly, calcaneonavicular coalition, fusing of the calcaneus and of the navicular tarsal (foot bones). This younger man, sometimes called the Archer's Companion, appears to have been raised in a more local ...
The burials are thought to date from around 2500 - 2200 BCE, [3] making them broadly contemporary with the Amesbury Archer who had been found the year before about half a kilometre to the south. [3] The broad date range is an artefact of the ranges of radiocarbon dates for different remains and archaeologists believe the grave was in use over a ...
The Amesbury Archer, Stonehenge, England, c. 2300 BC. Salisbury Museum. The earliest Bell Beaker samples in Iberia lacked Steppe ancestry, [4] but between ~2500 and 2000 BC there was a replacement of 40% of Iberia's ancestry and nearly 100% of its Y-chromosomes by people with Steppe ancestry. [57]
The Stonehenge Archer (c. 2330 BC - c. 2300 BC [1]) is the name given to a Bronze Age man whose body was discovered in the outer ditch of Stonehenge. Unlike most burials in the Stonehenge Landscape , his body was not in a barrow , although it did appear to have been deliberately and carefully buried in the ditch.
Amesbury Archer (commentary by Adrian Green) Iron Age settlement of Winterborne Kingston (director of the excavation Miles Russell) Medieval town of Trellech (director of the excavation Stuart Wilson) New cave entrance of Kents Cavern (direction of the excavation Rob Dinnis)
Amesbury 56 sits at the western end of the Cursus. Amesbury 56 (grid reference) and Winterbourne Stoke 30 (grid reference) are two barrows located within the western end of the Cursus. [36] Amesbury 56 is a bowl barrow, or possibly a bell barrow, which is around 1.5 metres high and about 25 metres in diameter. [37]
Moreover, Archer's 12.4% share count increase over the prior three years stands well below its peers' 21% average dilution rate. This conservative approach to capital management suggests to me ...
The archer possessed above average EEF admixture of 45% whereas the companion had around 33%, more in line with other British samples of the Early Bronze Age. Another man, [note 8] also buried in Amesbury Down and dating from 2500 to 2100 BC was also R-L21 [note 9] and is notable of having an EEF admixture of only 22%, the lowest ever found in ...