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Badgers threaten prehistoric burial sites

Determined digging by badgers living near Britain's Stonehenge is damaging ancient archaeological artifacts and human remains.
STONEHENGE
Badgers are burrowing through archaeological sites near Stonehenge, England's best-known megalithic monument, and British officials are debating what to do about it.Martin Cleaver / AP file
/ Source: Reuters

Determined digging by badgers living near Stonehenge, Britain's 5,000-year-old circle of megaliths, is damaging ancient archaeological artifacts and human remains.

The shy nocturnal animals are burrowing into prehistoric burial mounds on Salisbury Plain in southern England.

Their excavations already have disturbed some of the thousands of human remains and rare artifacts buried a few feet beneath the surface of the plain on which Stonehenge — a world heritage site — sits.

The danger posed by the badgers' homebuilding has become so serious that Britain's Ministry of Defense, which owns much of the land in the area, is trying to coax them away to less historically sensitive places.

"We have already moved badgers from two monuments located just north of Stonehenge," Ian Barnes, one of four archaeologists employed by the Ministry of Defense, told Reuters.

Barnes said Neolithic long barrows, burial mounds that date back to 3,500 B.C., are most vulnerable to attack, with about half of the 20 sites showing signs of badger activity. Long barrows are elongated, roughly rectangular structures that can be over 100 feet (30 meters) in length and several feet (a couple of meters) high.

Easy work for badgers
The characteristic chalk and soft earth of the area is easy work for badgers, who are proficient diggers. The creatures, which have a distinctive black- and white-striped head, often have more than one underground home, or sett.

Barnes said some monuments will have to be given up to the badgers because the damage they have caused is already too extensive.

There has been talk of culling the animals, but English Heritage, the government's adviser on Britain's historic environment and Stonehenge's caretaker, said that was not an option.

"Culling badgers has not been considered by English Heritage and is not our policy." an English Heritage spokeswoman said. "We have recently begun work on a project to assess in more detail the impact of the badgers on Salisbury Plain archaeological sites. We will be continuing to work on this project over the course of the summer of 2004 and hope the results will help us understand more about the nature of badger damage so we can protect England's archaeology as effectively as possible for future generations."

Fencing them out
Barnes said the most effective way of moving badgers has been shutting them out of their homes. "A mesh link fence is built around the sett when the badgers are out."

The process costs thousands of dollars, because each site has to be examined for archaeology before barriers are put up.

Badger groups agree the animals can be moved successfully and are working with the Ministry of Defense and English Heritage.

"Where there are badgers causing problems, they can be humanely excluded," said Elaine King, chief executive of the National Federation of Badger Groups. "Badgers can be successfully relocated, but it is important to understand their territorial behavior."

Not everyone's furry friend
Not everyone in Britain is so keen on the badger, which has been protected by law since 1992.

Farmers are worried that badgers are behind a rise in bovine tuberculosis because they carry the disease. The National Farmer's Union believes more research is needed to investigate possible links.

"There is no concrete proof that badgers are responsible, but given that badgers are carriers, their role needs to be examined more closely," said a spokeswoman for the farmers. "We are hearing a lot of reports from farmers saying they are seeing a lot more badgers."

Gray-coated adult badgers, which can be nearly 3 feet (1 meter) in length, have no natural enemies in Britain and posses powerful jaws capable of giving nasty bites. The biggest killer of adult badgers is road traffic.