Stonehenge’s age called into question after revelation about ancient burial site - Findings could suggest that ‘our current dating of Stonehenge might need revision’ ...
Researchers have found that a prehistoric burial site called Flagstones is one of the earliest known large circular ...
An ancient burial site has been revealed to be the earliest known large circular enclosure in Britain. Archaeological ...
Flagstones, an ancient burial site in Dorset, England, may be centuries older than Stonehenge, according to a new study.
Flagstones, an ancient monument and burial ground in England, is older than Stonehenge, a new radiocarbon-dating study finds.
A later burial of a young adult male under a large sarsen stone at the centre of the enclosure took place about 1,000 years or so after its initial use. The earliest construction on Stonehenge ...
Could Stonehenge have been a copy of Flagstones ... as implied by artifacts and burial practices. The findings highlight the interconnectedness of Neolithic communities across Britain and beyond.
The parallels between Flagstones and Stonehenge — both serving as burial grounds — have sparked discussions about the emergence of circular enclosures in ancient Britain, which may have taken ...
"Could Stonehenge have been a copy of Flagstones? Or do these findings suggest our current dating of Stonehenge might need revision?" Advanced radiocarbon analysis of findings, such as human remains, ...
or it might be that we need to go back to our dates of Stonehenge and think again," she told Live Science in an email. Flagstones, an ancient monument and burial site, was found in the 1980s ...