The landscape in which the contemporary monument sits held a number of Neolithic and early Bronze Age henge monuments[4][5] around 5,000 years ago and the new monument is based on excavations of one of these,[6] the site of which is close by.[7][8]
The monument was created by Clive Waddington,[9] who has written a guide to interpret it.[10][11]
^"Till Valley, History Society". Northumberland Gazette. 18 March 2018. Retrieved 6 June 2020. Till Valley Archaeological Society migrated to the Cheviot Centre in Wooler for a well attended meeting on February 7.
^Edwards, Benjamin (2009). Pits and the architecture of deposition narratives of social practice in the neolithic of North-East England. Durham, UK: Durham University.