The central, six-ton sandstone megalith likely came from a region in Scotland about 400 miles away. How a prehistoric society ...
Researchers made the findings with geological analysis and computer modelling.
New Scientist on MSN
Stonehenge's altar stone probably wasn't transported by a glacier
A glacier could have carried the giant sandstone at the centre of Stonehenge southwards from north-east Scotland, but this ...
New research suggests the six-tonne stone could have been transported via glacier to Doggerland - a prehistoric landscape ...
New theory could finally solve one of Stonehenge’s biggest mysteries - Doggerland, which once connected Britain to mainland ...
The ancient wonder’s appeal is down to its enduring sense of mystery, says operations manager Julia Richardson ...
Geek Spin on MSN
Stonehenge was actually a prehistoric sports arena
Stonehenge might have been a sports arena. Or close to it. English Heritage curator Win Scutt, who looks after the monument, has suggested that the stone circle was a kind of Stone Age competition ...
New research by Curtin University has revealed how one of Stonehenge’s most mysterious stones was likely transported hundreds ...
More than 100 volunteers have built a 20-foot high structure using the tools and techniques of Neolithic England.
Stonehenge poses more questions than answers, making it one of the most mysterious prehistoric monuments in the world. And ...
Stonehenge is a mysterious prehistoric monument in England, known for its massive stone circles. It was built around 5,000 ...
Silkhenge spiders were an unknown species until just over a decade ago. This is why when scientists stumbled upon a silkhenge ...
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