Stonehenge sky live feed offers year-round 'personal sunrise'
Gathering at Stonehenge on the summer solstice is an age-old tradition that thousands still observe -- and it's on the bucket list of many more around the world.
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Gathering at Stonehenge on the summer solstice is an age-old tradition that thousands still observe -- and it's on the bucket list of many more around the world.
With drums and with flower garlands, with wizard hats and with warm coats, up to 10,000 celebrants are expected to converge on England's Stonehenge to observe the summer solstice.
A missing piece from one of Stonehenge's giant sarsen stones, removed 60 years ago during excavations, has been returned to the ancient monument.
Evidence of the earliest celebrations in Britain, which drew people and animals from hundreds of miles away, has been uncovered at four Late Neolithic complexes near Stonehenge -- and pig was on the menu, according to a new study.
Five thousand years after people in the British Isles began building Stonehenge, scientists now know precisely where some of the massive rocks came from and how they were unearthed.
When a Stonehenge-like stone circle was discovered on farmland in rural Scotland last year, archaeologists were thrilled.
For six months now, the days have grown shorter and the nights have grown longer in the Northern Hemisphere -- but that's about to reverse itself.
Archaeologists have clashed with road developers in the UK over claims that engineers accidentally punctured a large hole through a 6,000-year-old structure near Stonehenge, potentially destroying prehistoric artifacts and evidence of now-extinct "monster cows."
As one of the world's most famous prehistoric monuments, Stonehenge still holds many secrets despite centuries of study. For the first time, new research is lifting the veil on the people who are buried at Stonehenge.