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The Amesbury Archer (c. 2340 BC - c. 2300 BC [1]) is an early Bronze Age (Bell Beaker) man whose grave was discovered during excavations at the site of a new housing development (grid reference 2]) in Amesbury near Stonehenge.
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 ]
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 ]
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.
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Part of the Wessex Gallery The Amesbury Archer In June 2012, the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) awarded Salisbury Museum a grant of £1,794,600 towards the development of a new Archaeology of Wessex gallery.