by Ancient Code Team
April 13,
2018
from
Ancient-Code Website
Image Credit:
Ring fort Dún Aonghasa
(Dun Aengus)
Europe, the Old Continent is known for its amazing history, Medieval
times, and stunning fortresses and monarchies.
Between 700 and 300 BC, a large number of forts were built in
Scotland, many of them on top of hills, with walls made of stones
piled together without the use of mortar.
This at first may not seem like anything out of the ordinary, as of
course, there are plenty of such structures across the world, and
not just in Europe.
However, the entire story changes completely going from ordinary to
extraordinary upon close examination which reveals that many of the
stones that make up the walls of these ancient fortresses are fused
together.
Some of the areas of the
forts were
converted into a kind of
glass, featuring the
remains of what was without doubt air bubbles and drops of molten
rock which are evidence that the stones were once subjected to
temperatures that led to a
vitrification process.
Part of the vitrified wall
at Sainte-Suzanne (Mayenne).
Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Not a single scholar has been able to explain how this is possible.
Therefore, during the
last three centuries, archaeologists have tried to answer the
questions surrounding the mysterious Scottish fortresses.
One of the first British
geologists to describe these mysterious structures and the mystery
behind them was John Williams, author of
Natural History of the Mineral Kingdom.
It was he who first described the mystery in 1777 after looking at a
few strange ruins, of which later more than a hundred examples have
been found throughout Europe,
mainly in Scotland.
So,
Who built them?
How did they manage
to vitrify the stone?
And what sort of
technology was used?
And is it possible
that we do not see the entire picture?
Too many questions and no
answers at all...
These structures were given the name of
vitrified forts. These structures
have amazed geologists for centuries because there is no scientific
explanation for how the rocks fused.
The temperatures at which they had to be submitted for vitrification
occur are comparable to the
detonation of an atomic bomb, say
some experts.
But what is interesting is the fact that there aren't one or two
vitrified structures, but hundreds of examples spread
across Europe, with 70 forts existing in Scotland.
As the first vitrified structures were discovered in Scotland, it
was thought that they were exclusive to Scotland, the most famous
being,
-
Dun Mac Sniachan
-
Benderloch
-
Craig Phadraig
-
Ord Hill
-
Dun Deardail
-
Knock Farril
-
Dun Creich
-
Finavon
-
Barryhill
-
Laws
-
Dun Gall
-
Anwoth
-
Tap O'Nort
Fragment of a vitrified wall
at
Sainte-Suzanne (Mayenne).
Image
Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
However, examples of similar structures have been found in,
...among others.
What is strange is that the vitrification is not total in all the
forts, nor is it homogeneous in the walls of the same sites.
Experts have found
that in some cases the stones appear partially calcined and
fused, while in others they are covered by a layer of vitreous
enamel, and sometimes, although rarely, the entire length of the
wall presents a solid mass of a vitreous substance.
Nobody knows how these
walls came to be vitrified.
Some scholars believe that it was intentional, to strengthen the
defenses of the forts, but in reality, this would have weakened
them, so it is unlikely that this was their intention.
Experts also say that the vitrification was unlikely to be the
result of war damage, as the result of a siege, because in order to
reach vitrification, the fires must have remained burning for days
at a temperature between 1050 and 1235 degrees Celsius, something
that is extremely improbable, although not impossible.
Some theories point to the possibility that the vitrification of the
first may have been the product of deliberate destruction either by
attackers after the capture of the forts or by their occupants as a
ritual act.
The dating of the forts across Europe covers a wide range of dates.
A view of the vitrified fortress
of Tap o'North, Scotland.
Image Credit: Pinterest
The oldest forts are believed to have been built during the
Iron Age, but there are also those many forts with similar
characteristics dating from the Roman era, while the last
corresponds to the Middle Ages.
Recent studies suggest that they were created by massive plasma
events such as
solar flares...
These occur when the
ionized gas in the atmosphere takes the form of gigantic
electric bursts, which can melt and vitrify rocks.
In the 1930s
archaeologists, Vere Gordon Childe and Wallace
Thorneycroft conducted an experiment with a gigantic fire
directed towards a stone wall, an experiment that was repeated in
1980 by the archaeologist Ian Ralston.
In both cases, the
experiments produced the partial vitrification of some of
the stones, but they failed to explain how it could have been
produced on such a large scale as in the vitrified forts.
In the absence of a
definitive theory or conclusive evidence, the vitrified forts of
Europe continue to be one of the strangest geological and
archaeological anomalies in the world, eluding explanation for
centuries.
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