Difference between revisions of "Stonehenge"

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In [[World War I]] the British government decided to demolish Stonehenge in order to make room for a longer runway for the nearby airforce base. After a great deal of public protest, it was instead decided to divert the runway. Stonehenge currently receives over a million visitors a week during the summer season, and some of the stones are already showing signs of imminent collapse due to wear and tear. Furthermore, the [[Druidry|Druids]] insist on holding there ceremonies there as they have done for thousands of years. When the government tried to stop them in the mid 1980s, the Druids took them to court and won.
 
In [[World War I]] the British government decided to demolish Stonehenge in order to make room for a longer runway for the nearby airforce base. After a great deal of public protest, it was instead decided to divert the runway. Stonehenge currently receives over a million visitors a week during the summer season, and some of the stones are already showing signs of imminent collapse due to wear and tear. Furthermore, the [[Druidry|Druids]] insist on holding there ceremonies there as they have done for thousands of years. When the government tried to stop them in the mid 1980s, the Druids took them to court and won.
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== See also ==
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*[[Crop Circles]]
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[[Category:Anthropology]]
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
 
[[Category:Tourist Attractions]]
 
[[Category:Tourist Attractions]]

Revision as of 17:06, July 24, 2007

Stonehenge is a megalithic monument located in southern England. The first evidence of construction secular scientists date to around 8000 BC, making Stonehenge the oldest known construction in the world, but it was added to over many thousands of years thereafter, with most of the present structure dating to 3000 BC. The word comes from the Anglo-Saxon stone, meaning 'stone', and henge, meaning 'hinge', because the distinctive upright pylons with their crosspieces were thought to resemble a door or gate. The tallest of these, known as the 'sarsen', is nearly 100 feet high.

Stonehenge is aligned to the sunrise at the summer solstice, or longest day of the year, around June 21. On that day the sun shines through the sarsen stone and hits something called the heel stone which lights up like a mirror, as it is made of polished quartz.

In World War I the British government decided to demolish Stonehenge in order to make room for a longer runway for the nearby airforce base. After a great deal of public protest, it was instead decided to divert the runway. Stonehenge currently receives over a million visitors a week during the summer season, and some of the stones are already showing signs of imminent collapse due to wear and tear. Furthermore, the Druids insist on holding there ceremonies there as they have done for thousands of years. When the government tried to stop them in the mid 1980s, the Druids took them to court and won.

See also