accredited-historical-slopStonehenge edition · revised 2026
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three studies · final reading edition

One stone. Three serious arguments.

Long-form studies of the Stonehenge Altar Stone, written to preserve the difference between geological evidence, historical inference and imaginative possibility.

The common evidence standard

01EstablishedWhat analysis and context directly support
02InferredWhat follows from explicit reasoning
03ProposedWhat remains a testable possibility

The Altar Stone’s likely origin in northeast Scotland is a remarkable finding. Its journey to Salisbury Plain remains unresolved. These papers examine three different consequences of that gap: how transport might have been organised, how collective labour might have acquired social value, and how modern institutions should interpret an extraordinary discovery without turning possibility into fact.

Reading noteEach paper is complete in itself. No process notes, internal frameworks or companion text are required to understand its evidence and argument.
Editorial principle A persuasive explanation is not automatically a demonstrated history. Every paper states what is known, what is inferred and what evidence could force the argument to change.