“…In 2012 the Stonehenge Hidden Landscapes Project (SHLP) published a short report in Archaeological Prospection (Gaffney et al, ) describing the project goals, the nature of fieldwork to be undertaken and the extent of the survey area. The primary aim of the project was to produce a new understanding of the Stonehenge landscape that transcends the interpretative limitations of traditional monument‐ and site‐focused approaches to field investigation characteristic of previous studies within the world heritage site (Bowden, Barber, Field, & Soutar, ; Cleal, Walker, & Montague, ; David & Payne, ; Field et al, ). In contrast, the SHLP has applied a range of geophysics and remote sensing technologies at a true ‘landscape scale’ to create a seamless map of subsurface and surface archaeological features and structures, encompassing both known monuments and new discoveries as elements within richly detailed and far more spatially‐extensive survey datasets.…”