This has gotten a bit of recent
coverage and brings such almost forgotten objects back into view.
Whenever they were laid down does
not particularly matter nor what they meant is also never going to be apparent. It did mean something t0o the builders and
certainly assisted in maintaining a clan’s memory of themselves as do all
ancient writings and monuments. They
were a primitive system when laid down and may or may not be indicative of
local technology. After all, this can be
put together today if a small group decides it is a good idea.
Besides all that, I think that
these stone rows would also be great for holding down a canvass. Yet the layout really seems awkward in this
case here. It may still have had very
practical uses that we have not understood.
The stone layouts in South
Africa were likely used to pin down sheet
walls or even brush walls. We simply do
not know.
That they are more prevalent than
we knew is a strong indicator of real utility that was universal and cross
cultural. That they still exist is a
function of the unique desert environment.
Visible Only From Above, Mystifying 'Nazca Lines' Discovered in Mideast
Owen Jarus, LiveScience Contributor
Date: 14 September 2011 Time: 10:33 AM ET
They stretch from Syria
to Saudi Arabia ,
can be seen from the air but not the ground, and are virtually unknown to the
public.
They are the Middle East's own version of the Nazca
Lines — ancient "geolyphs," or drawings, that span deserts
in southern Peru — and now, thanks to new satellite-mapping technologies, and
an aerial photography program in Jordan, researchers are discovering more of
them than ever before. They number well into the thousands.
Referred to by archaeologists as "wheels," these stone
structures have a wide variety of designs, with a common one being a circle
with spokes radiating inside. Researchers believe that they date back to
antiquity, at least 2,000 years ago. They are often found on lava fields and
range from 82 feet to 230 feet (25 meters to 70 meters) across. [See
gallery of wheel structures]
"In Jordan alone we've got stone-built structures that are
far more numerous than (the) Nazca Lines, far more extensive in the area that
they cover, and far older," said David Kennedy, a professor of classics
and ancient history at the University of Western Australia.
Kennedy's new research, which will be published in a forthcoming issue
of the Journal of Archaeological Science, reveals that these wheels form part
of a variety of stone landscapes. These include kites (stone structures used
for funnelling and killing animals); pendants (lines of stone cairns that run
from burials); and walls, mysterious structures that meander across the
landscape for up to several hundred feet and have no apparent practical
use.
His team's studies are part of a long-term aerial reconnaissance
project that is looking at archaeological sites across Jordan . As of now, Kennedy and his
colleagues are puzzled as to what the structures may have been used for or what
meaning they held. [History's
Most Overlooked Mysteries]
Fascinating structures
Kennedy's main area of expertise is in Roman archaeology, but he became
fascinated by these structures when, as a student, he read accounts of Royal
Air Force pilots flying over them in the 1920s on airmail routes across Jordan .
"You can't not be fascinated by these things," Kennedy said.
Indeed, in 1927 RAF Flight Lt. Percy Maitland published an account of
the ruins in the journal Antiquity. He reported encountering them over
"lava country" and said that they, along with the other stone
structures, are known to the Bedouin as the "works of the old men."
Kennedy and his team have been studying the structures using aerial
photography and Google Earth, as the wheels are hard to pick up from the
ground, Kennedy said.
"Sometimes when you're actually there on the site you can make out
something of a pattern but not very easily," he said. "Whereas if you
go up just a hundred feet or so it, for me, comes sharply into focus what the
shape is."
The designs must have been clearer when they were originally built.
"People have probably walked over them, walked past them, for centuries,
millennia, without having any clear idea what the shape was."
What were they used for?
So far, none of the wheels appears to have been excavated, something
that makes dating them, and finding out their purpose, more difficult.
Archaeologists studying them in the pre-Google Earth era speculated that they
could be the remains
of houses or cemeteries. Kennedy said that neither of these explanations
seems to work out well.
"There seems to be some overarching cultural continuum in this
area in which people felt there was a need to build structures that were
circular."
Some of the wheels are found in isolation while others are clustered
together. At one location, near the Azraq Oasis, hundreds of them can be found
clustered into a dozen groups. "Some of these collections around Azraq are
really quite remarkable," Kennedy said.
In Saudi Arabia, Kennedy's team has found wheel styles that are quite
different: Some are rectangular and are not wheels at all; others are circular
but contain two spokes forming a bar often aligned in the same direction that
the sun rises and sets in the Middle East.
The ones in Jordan
and Syria ,
on the other hand, have numerous spokes and do not seem to be aligned with any
astronomical phenomena. "On looking at large numbers of these, over a
number of years, I wasn't struck by any pattern in the way in which the spokes
were laid out," Kennedy said.
Cairns are often found associated with the wheels. Sometimes they
circle the perimeter of the wheel, other times they are in among the spokes. In
Saudi Arabia some of the cairns look, from the air,
like they are associated with ancient
burials.
Dating the wheels is difficult, since they appear to be prehistoric,
but could date to as recently as 2,000 years ago. The researchers have noted
that the wheels are often found on top of kites, which date as far back as
9,000 years, but never vice versa. "That suggests that wheels are more
recent than the kites," Kennedy said.
Amelia Sparavigna, a physics professor at Politecnico di Torino in
Italy, told Live Science in an email that she agrees these structures can be
referred to as geoglyphs in the same way as the Nazca
Lines are. "If we define a 'geoglyph' as a wide sign on the
ground of artificial origin, the stone circles are geoglyphs,"
Sparavignawrote in her email.
The function of the wheels may also have been similar to the enigmatic
drawings in the Nazca desert. [Science as Art: A Gallery]
"If we consider, more generally, the stone circles as
worship places of ancestors, or places for rituals connected with astronomical
events or with seasons, they could have the same function of [the] geoglyphs of
South America, the Nazca Lines for instance. The design is different, but the
function could be the same," she wrote in her email.
Kennedy said that for now the meaning of the wheels remains a mystery.
"The question is what was the purpose?"
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