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All That's Interesting on MSNInside The Enduring Mystery Of Who Built Stonehenge — And WhyFor centuries, scientists have been trying to determine who built Stonehenge. Today, the leading theory is that several ...
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Seven things you didn’t know about Stonehenge – and how to visitThe sight of Stonehenge, with its broken circle of stones and mighty central trilithons, standing in apparent isolation on Salisbury Plain has been mesmerising travellers for centuries.
New research suggests that, as well as being a probable centre for the veneration of the Sun, Stonehenge was also a fertility temple. A detailed study of a partly buried fallen stone at the monument ...
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Live Science on MSNStonehenge isn't the oldest monument of its kind in England, study revealsFlagstones, an ancient monument and burial ground in England, is older than Stonehenge, a new radiocarbon-dating study finds.
Blocks were brought to Salisbury Plain from all over the country in a grand project that would have taken about eight months – uniting people in the process ...
But ONE was more spectacular and more important than the rest. This is Stonehenge.This gigantic stone circle was created here around 4 500 years ago. The big question is what was it for?
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