Unesco wants Stonehenge tunnel plan amended
Discussion
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-wiltshire-66...
Does anyone know what their beef is with the current plan? The BBC article doesn't explain. Just says it "would have significant and inappropriate adverse impacts on the physical and visual integrity of the property". Surely a tunnel could not have more adverse impact than the existing road that runs past it?
Does anyone know what their beef is with the current plan? The BBC article doesn't explain. Just says it "would have significant and inappropriate adverse impacts on the physical and visual integrity of the property". Surely a tunnel could not have more adverse impact than the existing road that runs past it?
king arthur said:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-wiltshire-66...
Does anyone know what their beef is with the current plan? The BBC article doesn't explain. Just says it "would have significant and inappropriate adverse impacts on the physical and visual integrity of the property". Surely a tunnel could not have more adverse impact than the existing road that runs past it?
Ask your dad!Does anyone know what their beef is with the current plan? The BBC article doesn't explain. Just says it "would have significant and inappropriate adverse impacts on the physical and visual integrity of the property". Surely a tunnel could not have more adverse impact than the existing road that runs past it?
Depends whether they are concerned about the construction phase or end result.
https://news.sky.com/story/a303-stonehenge-tunnel-...
That suggests that the western portal is too close to the site, so archaeological evidence will be damaged or destroyed and they want the tunnel lengthened so that it starts further away.
https://news.sky.com/story/a303-stonehenge-tunnel-...
That suggests that the western portal is too close to the site, so archaeological evidence will be damaged or destroyed and they want the tunnel lengthened so that it starts further away.
Riley Blue said:
Is there any evidence that archaeological evidence exists there?
The entire area is one big archaeological site. If you stick a trowel in the soil, you find something. If the plan is to build a cut and cover tunnel anywhere near the main site, i.e. within a few miles of it, you'll inevitably be digging a big trench through a lot of archaeology. You could make a partial virtue out of that if the excavation is done carefully as you'd be making the biggest single archaeological trench in history ... but that's going to be an immensely time-consuming activity, so I expect it would have to be a bit more industrial and a fair amount of material world just get mashed.ATG said:
The entire areacountry is one big archaeological site. If you stick a trowel in the soil, you find something. If the plan is to build a cut and cover tunnel anywhere near the main site, i.e. within a few miles of it, you'll inevitably be digging a big trench through a lot of archaeology. You could make a partial virtue out of that if the excavation is done carefully as you'd be making the biggest single archaeological trench in history ... but that's going to be an immensely time-consuming activity, so I expect it would have to be a bit more industrial and a fair amount of material world just get mashed.
EFAJust build the fking tunnel. We have plenty of broken pots in museums around the country, just because these are near some big stones doesn't make them any more special.
Zetec-S said:
ATG said:
The entire areacountry is one big archaeological site. If you stick a trowel in the soil, you find something. If the plan is to build a cut and cover tunnel anywhere near the main site, i.e. within a few miles of it, you'll inevitably be digging a big trench through a lot of archaeology. You could make a partial virtue out of that if the excavation is done carefully as you'd be making the biggest single archaeological trench in history ... but that's going to be an immensely time-consuming activity, so I expect it would have to be a bit more industrial and a fair amount of material world just get mashed.
EFAJust build the fking tunnel. We have plenty of broken pots in museums around the country, just because these are near some big stones doesn't make them any more special.
ATG said:
Riley Blue said:
Is there any evidence that archaeological evidence exists there?
The entire area is one big archaeological site. If you stick a trowel in the soil, you find something. If the plan is to build a cut and cover tunnel anywhere near the main site, i.e. within a few miles of it, you'll inevitably be digging a big trench through a lot of archaeology. You could make a partial virtue out of that if the excavation is done carefully as you'd be making the biggest single archaeological trench in history ... but that's going to be an immensely time-consuming activity, so I expect it would have to be a bit more industrial and a fair amount of material world just get mashed.Hammersia said:
Zetec-S said:
EFA
Just build the fking tunnel. We have plenty of broken pots in museums around the country, just because these are near some big stones doesn't make them any more special.
Blimey, thank goodness they didn't think like that at Mildenhall or Sutton Hoo.Just build the fking tunnel. We have plenty of broken pots in museums around the country, just because these are near some big stones doesn't make them any more special.
And lets face it, the amount of money wasted faffing about with this over the past 2 decades could have probably paid for a full archaeological excavation.
Not sure where the view is coming from that we aren't ever going to investigate a given area. There are digs going on all the time. Sites get revisited. How on earth could we determine that a given site is never going to get dug between now and the end of history?
The challenge is to strike a balance between investigating and preserving the archaeology and allowing people to get on with building stuff. There's no right or wrong answer.
The challenge is to strike a balance between investigating and preserving the archaeology and allowing people to get on with building stuff. There's no right or wrong answer.
Riley Blue said:
ATG said:
Riley Blue said:
Is there any evidence that archaeological evidence exists there?
The entire area is one big archaeological site. If you stick a trowel in the soil, you find something. If the plan is to build a cut and cover tunnel anywhere near the main site, i.e. within a few miles of it, you'll inevitably be digging a big trench through a lot of archaeology. You could make a partial virtue out of that if the excavation is done carefully as you'd be making the biggest single archaeological trench in history ... but that's going to be an immensely time-consuming activity, so I expect it would have to be a bit more industrial and a fair amount of material world just get mashed.National Highways have jumped the gun and already started associated works, they have closed the A360 between Salisbury & Amesbury with a month left of the closure, spending money before the tunnel has been rubber stamped!
https://www.salisburyjournal.co.uk/news/24341255.l...
https://www.salisburyjournal.co.uk/news/24341255.l...
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