Stone Hendge
Stonehenge is hailed as one of the seven wonders of the world. But why is it called a“wonder” ? With science so advanced as to being able to clone mammals, one would thing their would be rarely any discoveries left to be made. However Stonehenge is shrouded in nothing more than merely theories and guesses based on little or no fact. Being that we do know very little, You have yo ask yourself a few questions. What was the purpose of Stonehenge being built, and that being said how was it constructed. There are thousands of ideas and speculations. The more likely correct and accepted theories may just surprise you. As you know, there has not been even one major structure built in the future nor the past that was ever completed by one man alone. Like Stonehenge they were major undertakings involving many people with many skills. Those who made Stonehenge succeeded in creating an incredibly complex and mysterious structure that lived on long after its creators had passed on. The many aspects of Stonehenge and the processes by which it was built delve into the levels of intelligence and sophistication of the civilizations used to designed and build massive the
theories on Stonehenge. I only printed the more well known theories, but one professor from the monument. This stage is backed by evidence of wooden stabilizing poles which are scattered all built, the landscape around the area on Salisbury Plain was rather open with more tilling soil and open prairie land, and less woodland. Underneath the first few feet of soil on Salisbury Plain there The planning and assembling of Stonehenge took a very long time ( 1000 years, from mainland, and had great influence on those already living there. Stonehenge II has been be linked to the Beaker people, approximately between the years 2,900 with each stone wearing roughly 30 tons each, they used around 4,000 men and it took nearly 15
Some topics in this essay:
Transport Sarsen,
ManyWonder Stonehenge,
Wessex Tribe,
Salisbury Plain,
Stonehenge Avenue’s,
Windmill Hill,
Neolithic Bronze,
Aubrey Holes,
Stone Age,
Stonehenge Beaker,
sarsen stones,
salisbury plain,
aubrey holes,
phase stonehenge,
sun moon,
stonehenge built,
windmill hill,
beaker people,
bronze ages,
people wessex,
56 aubrey holes,
purpose stonehenge built,
stone bronze ages,
windmill hill people,
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Approximate Word count = 2708
Approximate Pages = 11 (250 words per page double spaced)
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