News

For centuries, scientists have been trying to determine who built Stonehenge. Today, the leading theory is that several ...
The solstice is one of the few occasions each year when visitors are allowed to walk among the stones, which are otherwise fenced off.
Stonehenge: The most unsual theories about why the mysterious monument was built Aliens, giants, or even team-building exercises are some of theories that attempt to explain Stonehenge's origins ...
In a remarkable breakthrough published in the journal Science Direct, a research team led by geomorphologist Professor David Nash has finally uncovered the long-standing mystery surrounding the ...
Opinion: I visited Stonehenge and all I got was an appreciation of man's search for meaning I look at Stonehenge and see a reflection of myself and my toils. I think about the people who ...
The prehistoric megalithic structure located about 85 miles southeast of London in Wiltshire, England, is believed to have been a unifying project between ancient civilizations.
A new analysis of the 6,000-year-old stone circle known as Rujm el-Hiri (also Gilgal Refaim) in Golan Heights suggests that it was not built to observe the heavens.
Travelers who hate on Stonehenge are wrong. It's a monument to humanity's search for meaning, columnist James Briggs writes.
Stonehenge's Altar Stone, weighing roughly six tons, was brought to the site from Scotland and not Wales, as was previously thought, researchers said.
Researchers may have solved a Stonehenge mystery — and raised another. They say its central Altar Stone somehow got to England from Scotland, hundreds of miles farther away than originally thought.
A Mystery of Stonehenge May Finally Have Been Solved, but It Raises New Questions, Researchers Say The new findings suggest that the “Altar Stone" at the center of the mysterious monument didn't ...