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Dive into the research topics where Joshua Pollard is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua Pollard.


Antiquity | 2009

Who was buried at Stonehenge

Mike Parker Pearson; Andrew T. Chamberlain; Mandy Jay; Peter Marshall; Joshua Pollard; Colin Richards; Julian Thomas; Christopher Tilley; Kate Welham

Stonehenge continues to surprise us. In this new study of the twentieth-century excavations, together with the precise radiocarbon dating that is now possible, the authors propose that the site started life in the early third millennium cal BC as a cremation cemetery within a circle of upright bluestones. Britains most famous monument may therefore have been founded as the burial place of a leading family, possibly from Wales.


Oxford Journal of Archaeology | 1999

Life in the Woods: Tree-throws, 'Settlement' and Forest Cognition

Christopher Evans; Joshua Pollard; Markr Knight

The deposition of Early Neolithic material within tree-throw hollows in described, and the possible role of fallen trunks as places of occupation, settlement foci and landscape markers is discussed. Having implications for the interpretation of ubiquitous later Mesolithic pit dwellings, the evidence suggests a continuity of forest ‘identity’. Accordingly, patterns of clearances are also explored in relationship to modes of occupation, and the employment of ‘big wood’ in Neolithic monuments discussed.


Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society | 1995

Inscribing space : Formal deposition at the later Neolithic monument of Woodhenge, Wiltshire

Joshua Pollard

This paper presents evidence for intentionally structured deposition at the later Neolithic earthwork and timber setting of Woodhenge, near Amesbury, Wiltshire. Deposition is seen as a process through which a variety of connotations and symbolic references were incorporated in the monument, in addition to contributing towards a complex classification of space that served to order ceremonial and ritual practices. The evidence for formal deposition is also considered in the context of comparable, contemporary, activity at two other extensively excavated monuments in the region — Durrington Walls and Stonehenge I. Finally, complementarity and contrast in such special practices are viewed in relation to individual monument histories and the possiblity that, whilst the product of a general sacred tradition, the way in which each of the monuments was used was structured by different sets of meanings.


Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society | 1992

The Sanctuary, Overton Hill, Wiltshire: a re-examination

Joshua Pollard

This paper presents a re-assessment of the date and constructional sequence of the Sanctuary, a later Neolithic timber and stone setting on Overton Hill, near Avebury. Previous interpretations involving elaborate phasing and a protracted chronology for the site are rejected. Instead, it is argued that the site represents a single or double phase monument, constructed around 2500 cal BC and associated with pottery of the Grooved Ware tradition. The character of the pre-monument activity, construction and use of the site is examined. Patterns of formal deposition, involving pottery, lithics and human bone, are recognized, and considered in the context of the sites architecture and the structured organization of space, access and movement.


World Archaeology | 1999

Non‐portable stone artefacts and contexts of meaning: The tale of Grey Wether (www.museums.ncl.ac.uk/Avebury/stone4.htm)

Mark Gillings; Joshua Pollard

It is easy to appreciate that portable artefacts can carry lengthy biographies. Those biographies can encapsulate many meanings which will have varied from production, to use, to deposition, with significance changing according to time, place and ownership. However, the cultural biography of static objects, particularly if they are essentially natural rather than culturally modified, may seem more prescribed. It is our contention that this is often far from the case, as the social lives of the stones making up the megalithic settings at Avebury, Wiltshire, vividly demonstrate.


Archaeological Dialogues | 1998

Romancing the stones. Towards a virtual and elemental Avebury

Joshua Pollard; Mark Gillings

The late Neolithic monument complex at Avebury, Wiltshire, continues to elicit much curiosity and attention. However, with excavation unlikely to occur in the near future, new and non-destructive means of exploring the monument complex are required. Although a number of such investigations have been undertaken, to date no concerted effort has been made to consolidate the results within a single framework. The opening stages of such a project, involving innovative research using GIS and Virtual-Reality technologies within an explicitly theoretical interpretative agenda, are described here.


Cambridge Archaeological Journal | 2001

Shifting Perceptions: Spatial Order, Cosmology, and Patterns of Deposition at Stonehenge

Joshua Pollard; Clive Ruggles

The changing cosmological symbolism incorporated in Phases 1 and 2 at Stonehenge is reviewed in the light of new evidence from patterns of deposition prior to the construction of the bluestone and sarsen stone settings. The early structure of the monument and attendant depositional practices embodied a scheme of radial division, including a symbolic quartering primarily demarcated by solstitial rising and setting points. Through sustained ritual practice, however, the motions of the moon came increasingly to be referenced through deposition, particularly of cremations. This evidence seems to contradict earlier claims of a sudden shift in and around Wessex during the mid-third millennium BC from a predominantly lunar to a predominantly solar cosmology. It suggests instead that interest in solar and lunar events did not necessarily preclude each other and that over the centuries there was a process of subtle change involving the continual reworking of symbolic schemes emphasizing a sense of ‘timelessness’ and the unchanging order of the universe.


Antiquity | 2009

The date of the Greater Stonehenge Cursus

Julian Thomas; Peter Marshall; Mike Parker Pearson; Joshua Pollard; Colin Richards; Christopher Tilley; Kate Welham

The Greater Cursus - 3km long and just north of Stonehenge - had been dated by a red deer antler found in its ditch in the 1940s to 2890-2460 BC. New excavations by the authors found another antler in a much tighter context, and dating a millennium earlier. It appears that the colossal cursus had already marked out the landscape before Stonehenge was erected. At that time or soon after, its lines were re-emphasised, perhaps with a row of posts in pits. So grows the subtlety of the discourse of monuments in this world heritage site.


Antiquity | 2015

Craig Rhos-y-felin: a Welsh bluestone megalith quarry for Stonehenge

Mike Parker Pearson; R. E. Bevins; Rob Ixer; Joshua Pollard; Colin Richards; Kate Welham; Ben Chan; Kevan Edinborough; Derek Hamilton; Richard I. Macphail; Duncan Schlee; Jean-Luc Schwenninger; Ellen Simmons; Martin J. Smith

Abstract The long-distance transport of the bluestones from south Wales to Stonehenge is one of the most remarkable achievements of Neolithic societies in north-west Europe. Where precisely these stones were quarried, when they were extracted and how they were transported has long been a subject of speculation, experiment and controversy. The discovery of a megalithic bluestone quarry at Craig Rhos-y-felin in 2011 marked a turning point in this research. Subsequent excavations have provided details of the quarrying process along with direct dating evidence for the extraction of bluestone monoliths at this location, demonstrating both Neolithic and Early Bronze Age activity.


Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society | 2010

The miniliths of Exmoor

Mark Gillings; Joshua Pollard; Jeremy Taylor

This paper presents the results of a programme of research on an unusual group of prehistoric stone settings located on Exmoor, south-west England. Taking a variety of semi-geometric and apparently random forms, a total of 59 settings have been identified, with new discoveries taking place on a regular basis. These stone settings are remarkable for their diminutive size, with component stones often standing to heights of 100 mm or less, a factor which has led to their being termed ‘minilithic’. Through reference to the results of a programme of geophysical survey and small-scale excavation targeted upon a particularly rich cluster of settings around the upper reaches of Badgworthy Water, issues of morphology, dating, relationships, and the implications of the Exmoor miniliths for developing understandings monumentality are discussed.

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Kate Welham

Bournemouth University

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Julian Thomas

University of Manchester

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Colin Richards

University of the Highlands and Islands

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David Wheatley

University of Southampton

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David Robinson

University of Central Lancashire

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