The Cerne Giant is fighting a battle against climate change and algae as volunteers and workers battle against the heat to re-chalk the giant to ensure that he can still be seen.
'The giant is hundreds of years old but the modern world is certainly affecting him,' said Luke Dawson, a National Trust lead ranger, who is supervising the workers and volunteers re-chalking the giant.
'We've noticed algae growth starting to dull the giant's bright white outline. We can't say for certain what's driving that, but warmer, wetter conditions may be a factor. The milder winters and wetter summers make perfect growing conditions,' Dawson said.
'We're also seeing more intense rainfall, which can increase water runoff and gradually wear away the chalk, so we're planning further monitoring to understand the impacts,' he continued.
The re-chalking comes in the midst of a record heatwave that perfectly illustrates the problems the giant is facing.
Who made the giant, why the giant was made, and when it was made have remained a mystery for centuries, however we may be finally getting some clarity on some of those questions.
National Trust senior archaeologist Martin Papworth said while studying soil samples from the giant: 'The archaeology on the hillside was surprisingly deep – people have been re-chalking the giant over a long period of time. The deepest sample from his elbows and feet tells us he could not have been made before 700AD, ruling out theories that he is of prehistoric or Roman origin.'
Papworth's new discovery does lean it heavily towards it appearing around the time of the Saxons.
'This probable Saxon date places him in a dramatic part of Cerne history. Nearby Cerne Abbey was founded in 987AD and some sources think the abbey was set up to convert the locals from the worship of an early Anglo Saxon god known as 'Heil' or 'Helith.' The early part of our date range does invite the question, was the giant originally a depiction of that god,' Papworth said.
A geoarchaeologist may have a theory as to why it seems to have been forgotten.
Source: International Business Times UK