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Two newly discovered stone circles, built about 5,000 years ago in what is now the southwest of England, are the latest to show that Stonehenge was not the only Stone Age circle built in the region.
As we age, our social networks tend to become more dispersed geographically, and the opportunities for spontaneous, repeated interactions (the bedrock of new friendships) decrease.
Mystery crop circles keep packing 'em in / New Age believers descend en masse on Solano wheat field. By Steve Rubenstein, Chronicle Staff Writer July 10, 2003-LIZ HAFALIA-LIZ HAFALIA.
Such alienation is understandable — “Circle Mirror Transformation” pokes a lot of fun at New Age pretensions and manners, but for those who’ve suffered full or partial immersion it’s a ...
As the last Ice Age tightened its hold on Europe, a group of people living near the Don River piled dozens of mammoth bones into a 12.5m (30ft) wide circle. They may have lived in the shelter of ...
For their latest study, Dr. Getzin and his colleagues spent three years examining fairy circles at 10 study sites across 620 miles of desert. One of those years, 2020, was a drought, while 2021 ...
The new finds, according to Alan Endacott, the independent archaeologist who found them, reinforce the idea that prehistoric people constructed a "sacred arc" of stone circles around high land in ...
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