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A Guide to Stone Circles (New Edition), Aubrey Burl
A Guide to Stone Circles (New Edition), Aubrey Burl

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View What's New (Latest Block)  ·  More new Pictures
The Megalith Map
UK and Ireland

Megaliths and Prehistory in Europe
Rest of the World
Megalithic Culture worldwide
Text Pages: Topper
Submitted by bat400 on Saturday, 04 July 2009 (6274 reads)
North America Ancient Quarry in Allendale County, South Carolina.
Pebbles shaped by nature alone? Lightning ignited fires? Artifacts misplaced in the geologic record? Or a 50,000 year old tool workshop in South Carolina?
Article on the site and recent field season. Comments from Al Goodyear and a narrowly worded statement from the Smithsonian's Director of the Paleo-Indian Program. Also, Time Team America visits Topper. See comments.
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Text Pages: Sugarloaf Mound
Submitted by bat400 on Saturday, 04 July 2009 (1271 reads)
North America Artificial Mound in Saint Louis County, Missouri.
Sugarloaf is the last remnant of the Saint Louis earthen mounds. It was one of the southern most mounds in the area and lies on a ridge directly above the Mississippi River's west side, and south of the modern city's original center.
Osage Tribe interested in buying Last Ancient Mound in Saint Louis, Missouri.
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News: Bulgarian Speleologists Discover Unique Thracian Sanctuary
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (51 reads)
Recent Discoveries Speleologists from the city of Veliko Tarnovo have discovered an absolutely unique Thracian sanctuary in Northern Bulgaria.

The news has been announced by Evgeni Koev from the speleological club "Dervent" based in Veliko Tarnovo. The speleologists came across the Thracian sanctuary several days ago as they were studying cavern objects along the Danube.
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News: Bulgarian Archaeologists Discover 7 000-Years-Old Settlement
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (31 reads)
Recent Discoveries Bulgarian archaeologists have discovered a 7 000-years-old settlement close to the northeast city of Shumen.

The village dates back to the Stone-Copper Age, and is located in the locality of Chanadzhik, near the village of Sushina and the Ticha Dam.
( More... | 1110 bytes | comments? |   )

News: Ancient child deaths uncovered
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (27 reads)
Recent Discoveries An archaeological excavation in southern Vietnam of a site more than 3000 years old has shed new light on how the death of young children was viewed by community members and uncovered the oldest clear evidence of rice agriculture in the region.
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News: Archaeologists Research Balkans’ Oldest Funeral Site
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (28 reads)
Recent Discoveries A team of Dutch archaeologists has come to the village of Dzhulyunitsa in central northern Bulgaria in order to research the oldest funeral site in the Balkans.
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News: Serbian archaelogists find Neolithic grave
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (25 reads)
Recent Discoveries Serbian archaeologists have uncovered a seven-millienia old grave in a Neolithic village in the west of the country, the daily Blic reported Thursday.
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News: Grid makes a SPLASH in underwater archaeology
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (26 reads)
Other Archaeology Submerged beneath the waves lies a large part of human history.

For our ancestors, the ancient coastlines were attractive places to settle and experiment with what became the foundations of civilization. As the major glaciers melted between sixteen and six thousand years ago, these sites — where people first began to make fishing equipment, build boats and create permanent settlements — became engulfed by the rising seas.
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News: Replica of ancient lyre complete
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (26 reads)
Other Archaeology A replica of an ancient lyre which was damaged during unrest in Iraq has been built by enthusiasts in Cambridgeshire.

The instrument, similar to a small harp, was made around 4,550 years ago but was destroyed when looters raided the Baghdad museum where it was kept.
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News: Untouched Tomb Uncovered in Bethlehem
Submitted by coldrum on Friday, 03 July 2009 (24 reads)
Recent Discoveries Workers renovating a house in the traditional town of Jesus' birth accidentally discovered an untouched ancient tomb containing clay pots, plates, beads and the bones of two humans, a Palestinian antiquities official said Tuesday.
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Text Pages: Calleva Atrebatum
Submitted by coldrum on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (119 reads)
Megaliths in England Ancient Village or Settlement in Hampshire
Dig taking place to investigate the iron Age settlement, see comment.
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News: Prehistoric European Cave Artists Were Female
Submitted by coldrum on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (55 reads)
Rock Art (Petroglyphs) Inside France's 25,000-year-old Pech Merle cave, hand stencils surround the famed "Spotted Horses" mural.

For about as long as humans have created works of art, they've also left behind handprints. People began stenciling, painting, or chipping imprints of their hands onto rock walls at least 30,000 years ago.
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News: Important historic remains unearthed in Bridlington
Submitted by coldrum on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (52 reads)
Recent Discoveries Remains of some of the earliest houses ever found in the North of England have been unearthed in Bridlington.

Archaeologists have discovered that buildings stood on the site of the current Cottage Farm development more than 5,000 years ago.
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News: Models of Earliest (Camel-Pulled) Vehicles Found
Submitted by coldrum on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (51 reads)
Recent Discoveries Some of the world's first farmers may have sped around in two-wheeled carts pulled by camels and bulls, suggests a new analysis on tiny models of these carts that date to 6,000-5,000 years ago.
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Events: Stonehenge Landscape Guided Walks, July 2009
Submitted by coldrum on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (52 reads)
Stonehenge Learn about ancient peoples, hidden histories and the changing landscape with a National Trust guide. A great way to discover the archaeology beyond the stone circle, and find out about the latest discoveries as recently revealed on Time Team!

Booking Essential 01980 664780
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Text Pages: Chaco Culture
Submitted by bat400 on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (2873 reads)
North America Ancient Village or Settlement in San Juan County, New Mexico.
Petroglyphs, Ancient Buildings, Ancient Roads, Artifacts.

Chaco Canyon appears on satellite maps as a sliver of green, but this is only by comparison to the desert surrounding it. A thousand years ago it was the center of a complex culture stretching a hundred miles in any direction.
Chaco Meridian Theory. Cardinal Directions provide clues to a Common Ruling Ideology? See Comments.
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Photo Pages: Castalian Springs Mound
Submitted by bat400 on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 (4868 reads)
Archaeological Digs Castalian Springs MoundArtificial Mound in Sumner County, Tennessee. The focal point of a Mississippian village complex is an unusual mound and earthwork. Today's site is a truncated conical mound at the west end of a broad, low, rectangular earthwork, aligned in an east-west direction. The other mounds at the site, as well as the principal mound and earthwork have been plowed down - the field has been in pasture for the last twenty or more years.
Web Diary describes 2009 Dig Season at Tennessee mineral springs Ancient Village.
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Photo Pages: Devils Quoits
Submitted by Celia_Haddon on Tuesday, 30 June 2009 (7249 reads)
Megaliths in England Devils QuoitsRuined Stone Circle in Oxfordshire. This is the site near Stanton Harcourt on land worked by Hanson Waste Management belonging to All Souls. Nothing much to see - a largish mound (landscaping thanks to Hanson rather than nature, I suspect), a vague outline of a henge, one huge stone on its side, two other big ones half buried, and some large boulders carefully preserved by the waste people, which are stacked up in case they might be needed for reconstruction.
Good News on this re-erected stone circle. Word is just in about the Devils Quoit's Re-Opening Day which is Saturday, 13 September, at the Quoits, Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire. See latest comment for more information. British Archaeology Magazine July/August issue has an article about The Devil's Quoits.See comment.
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Photo Pages: British Museum
Submitted by Andy B on Tuesday, 30 June 2009 (7362 reads)
Events British MuseumMuseum in Greater London. The original and the best - the British Museum contains archaeology from around the world. Of particular interest are the Mold Cape, the Battersea horned helmet and shield, Lindow Man, Sutton Hoo, Mildenhall treasures and much, much more.
Events at the British Museum, see comment.
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Photo Pages: Carwynnen Quoit
Submitted by Andy B on Tuesday, 30 June 2009 (4363 reads)
Megaliths in England Carwynnen QuoitBurial Chamber in Cornwall. At last, after 2 years of delay, the Sustainable Trust have raised the funds to buy this ruined scheduled ancient monument set in 5 acres of land, to allow access to the road.
Picnic at Carwynnen Quoit, Sunday 19th July, see comment.
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10,000 BC (2008 version)
The Quest for Fire
Clan of the Cave Bear
The Last Neanderthal
One Million BC
When Dinosaurs rules the Earth (Victoria Vetri)
Teenage Cavegirl
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2001 Space Odyssey (the initial sequence)


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