Stonehenge is one of the
greatest unexplained mysteries of the world. It's certainly no hoax (estimated
to be more than 5,000 years old) and is probably the most important prehistoric
monument in the whole of Britain. When you visit Stonehenge,
you'll find yourself driving for miles through rolling hills and countryside
until, suddenly, you catch sight of this bizarre structure. There's an eerie
feel to the area around Stonehenge, and for thousands of years it has soon silently,
giving away few clues as to the meaning of its existence.
Excavations have revealed that
Stonehenge was built in four stages:
First a series of holes were
dug around 3,100 BC for religious ceremony.
Then, more than 1,000 years
later, the most dramatic stage of building took place. Huge bluestones from
mountains in Wales were lugged more than 240 miles to the Stonehenge site. Why
would anyone do this in the age before the wheel? And how would they accomplish
such a feat? These are true unexplained mysteries - because it really wouldn't
have been hard to find rocks closer nearby. The stones were then set up to form
an incomplete double circle, aligned perfectly with the midsummer sunrise.
The third stage in 2,000 BC saw
the arrival of the more stones, transported by land from the Marlborough Downs
some 25 miles away.
Finally, after a further 500
years had passed, someone felt the need to rearrange the massive Welsh
bluestones into the familiar horseshoe and circle we see today.
One of the great unexplained
mysteries of ancient man, the meaning of Stonehenge is still not clear today.
Was it a temple, a burial ground, an observatory, or an ancient calendar?
Without a time machine to go back and ask, we may never know...
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