Extract Thirty-SevenThere is no possibility, as there was with causewayed tidal islands and Venus Pools, to be definitive about the extent of the Hand of Megalithia. A better way forward is to list the uses that Ancient Britons made of their (already?) remarkable coastline, given what we have already learned as to their proclivities and abilities. And not just the Brits of course since as we have seen with St Malo and shall see with the Brittany coastline, northern France is similarly blessed with these extended sea-inlets.
It is clear that the Megalithics and tides are entwined; it is also obvious that Megalithics and metal-mining are linked; and that shipping plays a major part throughout. The last would seem to point to why Megalithics would wish to use, adapt or even create these huge enclosed bodies of water, yet a note of caution is needed here. The archaeological evidence (ie the lack of archaeological evidence) would seem to indicate that the Megalithics did
not use harbours in the sense we use today, of specially engineered stone or wooden jetties.
There must then be an overwhelming assumption that they used beaches to bring their craft in for loading and unloading. This is presumably the origin of their interest in tides since knowledge of tides – not just diurnal but spring and neap – is essential for the safe exploitation of beaches.
We have been using as our exemplar the shipping route St Malo – Weymouth but in truth Weymouth is a very awkward harbour even today. Nor is Portland next door much better in the absence of the huge breakwaters that the Royal Navy were able to place there:
However, Chesil Beach is an almost perfect place to ‘beach’ a boat so long as you don’t mind a bit of rough treatment from the shingle and, if you do, there is Weymouth Bay on the other side, an unexcelled vista of gently sloping soft sand. Of course you can always choose between the two, as you approach Portland Bill, depending on the state and direction of the wind.