News

Why Stonehenge was ‘ultimately a failure’ in striking new theory on its origins - Stonehenge may have served a political purpose for prehistoric Britons, research suggests ...
Stonehenge researches have found new evidence to argue the creation of the World Heritage Site was partly used to unify the people living across Great Britain.
Roughly 5,000 years after first appearing on a patch of English grassland, Stonehenge isn't done spilling its secrets, if surprising new research is to be believed.
New technology suggests epic journey part of Stonehenge’s origins. It must have been one of the most amazing human migrations of all time – hundreds of people, oxen and 20-tonne rocks making a ...
The new findings suggest that the “Altar Stone" at the center of the mysterious monument didn't come from Wales, as was previously thought A new study challenges the origins of Stonehenge. In a ...
A new analysis of Stonehenge’s “Altar Stone” suggests Neolithic people walked or sailed some 500 miles to transport the six-ton boulder ...
Secrets of Stonehenge New archeological finds shed light on the most misunderstood monument of the ancient world.
New radiocarbon dating and human remains, red deer antlers, and charcoal found in the area puts this ancient stone circle near Dorchester at 3,200 BCE–roughly 300 years older than Stonehenge.
Stonehenge's Altar Stone, weighing roughly six tons, was brought to the site from Scotland and not Wales, as was previously thought, researchers said.
By analyzing grains of rock within Stonehenge's "altar stone," researchers determined it was most likely transported from present-day Scotland — more than 450 miles away.
Stonehenge was built to unify ancient Britons during a “legitimation crisis” caused by the migration of people from mainland Europe, researchers have suggested. More than 4,000 years ago, The ...