West Woods Explained

Area:957 acres (387 ha)
Label:West Woods
Location:Marlborough, Wiltshire, United Kingdom
Coordinates:51.3964°N -1.7767°W
County:Wiltshire

West Woods is a wood about NaN0NaN0 southwest of the market town of Marlborough in the English county of Wiltshire, United Kingdom. Its area is approximately 957acres. It is open to the public, and is popular with visitors in the Spring, when bluebells cover the forest floor.

History

West Woods was once part of the Royal hunting forest of Savernake until the bounds were changed in the 1330s. West Woods is approximately one fifth of the size of Savernake and was clear felled in 1928 then replanted, mainly with beech.[1] [2] The woods have been visited since before the Bronze Age, supplying flints and later charcoal facilities.[3]

Archaeological link to Stonehenge

In July 2020, it was announced that West Woods was the most likely origin of most of the sarsen stones used to build the outer circle and central trilithon horseshoe at Stonehenge.[4] Archaeologists and geochemists analysed a core drilled from one of the upright sarsen stones at Stonehenge in 1958, and compared it to samples from 20 sarsen outcrops around the country. The chemistry of samples from the core yielded a unique match with sarsen samples from West Woods.

The whereabouts of the core had been unknown until it was returned from the United States by Englishman Robert Phillips in 2018.[5] [6]

West Woods also contains a Neolithic long barrow, approximately 40 metres long and 27m wide at the widest point, up to 3.5m high, and surrounded by a ditch on all sides.[7] [8] The wood is bisected by an ancient earthwork known as the Wansdyke, dating back to the 5th or 6th century BC.[9]

In February 2007 the Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society conducted the first of a series of surveys which revealed considerable detail about West Wood and the surrounding areas, producing evidence covering a range of time periods including Mesolithic, Neolithic, and post-Medieval. The report discusses the findings of four seasons' worth of field work and includes maps and tables of discoveries.[10] [11]

Hugh Newman conducted a search of the West Woods area in 2020, discovering more details about the long barrow as well as the sarsen stones within the area, including evidence at Clatford Farm.[12]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: West Woods. 6 December 2020. Woodland Trust.
  2. Web site: West Woods. www.wiltshirewalks.co.uk.
  3. Web site: West Woods. December 16, 2016.
  4. News: 2020-07-29. Mystery of origin of Stonehenge stones solved. en-GB. BBC News. 2020-07-29.
  5. News: 2019-05-08. Missing part of Stonehenge returned. en-GB. BBC News. 2020-07-29.
  6. Web site: Hershberger . Scott . One Mystery of Stonehenge's Origins Has Finally Been Solved . Scientific American . 31 July 2020 . July 29, 2020 . Detailed testing of the chemical signature of the Neolithic monument’s most prominent large stones pinpointed where they came from.
  7. Web site: West Woods Long Barrow. The Megalithic Portal.
  8. Book: Castleden, Rodney. Neolithic Britain: New Stone Age sites of England, Scotland and Wales. October 24, 2014. Routledge. 9781317606666. Google Books.
  9. Web site: Area 15: Savernake Forest and West Woods - Historic North Wessex Downs. 2020-07-29. www.historicnorthwessexdowns.org.uk.
  10. News: WANHS West Woods Part 1 . 2020-07-30.
  11. News: ADS Archaeology Data Service Amadio, L. (2011). West Woods, Wiltshire: An Archaeological Survey. Devizes: Wiltshire Archaeological & Natural History Society . 2020-07-30.
  12. Web site: Newman. Hugh. September 9, 2020. Exploring West Woods and the genesis of the sarsen stones. 10 September 2020. Megalithomania. YouTube. Walk around West Woods and Clatford area searching for remains of sarsen stones.