A 5,000-year-old cow tooth has yielded new evidence linking Stonehenge to Wales and shedding light on how the ancient monument’s huge stones could have been moved across Britain. The finding comes from a Neolithic cow jawbone that was discovered in 1924 beside the south entrance of Stonehenge. The bone had gone unremarked for many years […]| Archaeology News Online Magazine
New research of a molar supports the theory that cows or oxen could have moved the enormous stones from Wales to Salisbury Plain| The Art Newspaper - International art news and events
In 2025, for most people in the world the June solstice will fall on 21 June. For those of us living in the the Northern Hemisphere, it is the day of the year when there is the most daylight. The …| Explaining Science
Usually, you can’t touch Stonehenge, so I visited other megaliths.| Tim Covell
Far out in the wild steppe of Mongolia, carved rocks dot the landscape. Dated to the Bronze Age, nobody knows who carved the Mongolian Deer Stones, or why.| Historic Mysteries
UK government scraps Stonehenge tunnel project| ARTnews.com