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Prehistoric faeces reveals secret of Stonehenge builders’ diet

20 May 2022 4 minute read
Stonehenge. Picture by garethwiscombe (CC BY 2.0).

Ancient faeces found at a settlement thought to have housed builders of Stonehenge suggests parasites were consumed via badly cooked cow offal during epic winter feasts.

It was revealed last year that the monument may have started as a stone circle in Wales that was then dismantled and rebuilt 280 kilometres away at its current location in England.

A team of archaeologists uncovered the remains of the original site, in the Preseli hills of west Wales.

Now biologists have analysed the faeces found at the site of a prehistoric village near the monument has uncovered evidence of the eggs of parasitic worms.

Previous analyses of cow teeth from Durrington Walls suggest some cattle were herded almost 100km from Wales or another location to the site for large-scale feasting.

They also ate freshwater fish, suggesting they had brought them to present-day Wiltshire from their home settlement, scientists said.

The parasites also suggest the inhabitants feasted on the internal organs of cattle and fed leftovers to their dogs, they added.

Lead author Dr Piers Mitchell, from Cambridge’s Department of Archaeology, said: “This is the first time intestinal parasites have been recovered from Neolithic Britain, and to find them in the environment of Stonehenge is really something.

“The type of parasites we find are compatible with previous evidence for winter feasting on animals during the building of Stonehenge.”

‘Most likely’

The findings came from Durrington Walls, a Neolithic settlement just 2.8km from Stonehenge, and dating from around 2500 BC, when much of the famous site was constructed.

A team of archaeologists led by the University of Cambridge investigated 19 pieces of ancient faeces, or coprolite, found at the settlement and preserved for more than 4,500 years.

Five of the coprolites (26%) – one human and four dog – contained the eggs of parasitic worms.

The researchers suggest this is the earliest evidence for intestinal parasites in the UK where the host species that produced the faeces has also been identified.

Four of the coprolites, including the human one, contained the eggs of capillariid worms.

While the parasites infect a wide range of animals, on the rare occasion that a European species infects humans the eggs get lodged in the liver and do not appear in stool.

The scientists say evidence of them in human faeces indicates the person had eaten the raw or undercooked lungs or liver from an already infected animal, resulting in the parasite’s eggs passing straight through the body.

“As capillariid worms can infect cattle and other ruminants, it seems that cows may have been the most likely source of the parasite eggs,” Dr Mitchell explained.

Photo issued by Lisa-Marie Shillito of human coprolite (preserved human faeces) from Durrington Walls.

‘Feasts’

Co-author Evilena Anastasiou, who assisted with the research while at Cambridge, said: “Finding the eggs of capillariid worms in both human and dog coprolites indicates that the people had been eating the internal organs of infected animals, and also fed the leftovers to their dogs.”

Prof Mike Parker Pearson, from UCL’s Institute of Archaeology, who excavated Durrington Walls between 2005 and 2007, added: “This new evidence tells us something new about the people who came here for winter feasts during the construction of Stonehenge.

“Pork and beef were spit-roasted or boiled in clay pots but it looks as if the offal wasn’t always so well cooked.

“The population weren’t eating freshwater fish at Durrington Walls, so they must have picked up the tapeworms at their home settlements.”

The findings are published in the journal Parasitology.


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Cynan
Cynan
1 year ago

Either that or parasitic worm eggs were a delicacy like prehistoric caviar.

David
David
1 year ago
Reply to  Cynan

“I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here” have their new delicacy for the new series in Australia.

Hue
Hue
1 year ago

What a pile of shíte!

thuggee
thuggee
1 year ago

lovely bit of offal!

Emrys Jones
Emrys Jones
1 year ago

This is an interesting article but why do reporters or whoever responsible insist on applying modern day borders to a prehistoric situation? There was no England and Wales at the time it was Ancient Britain or Brythonic. This kind of reporting just confirms to the uneducated that Stonhenge is an English ediface and has forever been so.

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