Country Life Trending: January 30, 2021 The sacred 4000 year old site of Seahenge exposed briefly by the shifting sands on the Norfolk coast near Hunstanton. Credit: Alamy Stock Photo Seahenge lay beneath the shifting sands of the north Norfolk coast almost until the dawn of the 21st century. In 1998, a man named John Lorimer was walking along the beach at Holme-next-the-Sea when he stumbled upon an extraordinary Bronze Age timber circle that had emerged overnight from East Anglia’s shifting sands. Archaeologists and druids flocked to see the 55 posts circling an upside-down tree, roots in the air, a relic from 2050 BC. Cast replica of Seahenge prehistoric tree stump at the King’s Lynn Museum, Norfolk.