Submitted by MarkJ99 on Tuesday, 29 April 2025 (6415 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgePart of a complex at Bagbie, Dumfries & Galloway consisting of a small four poster stone circle, this cairn and a single standing stone. See our nearby sites list or map for the others. There is a view of the sea which may have influenced its location. Image submitted by markj99
Submitted by j_iglar on Tuesday, 29 April 2025 (31 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeA dolmen or anta located in the Vale de Azurrague. It is the only identified dolmen in the Ourém area. However, other sites nearby include caves where human remains were found. These correspond to the same period as the dolmen. Image submitted by j_iglar
Submitted by SolarMegalith on Monday, 28 April 2025 (86 reads)
Iron Age and Later PrehistoryNuragic sacred well in Sardinia (Sardegna). One of the smallest Nuragic sacred wells in Sardinia is located north of Nuraghe Santa Sabina. The well is circa 2m deep, its staircase is 5m long. The vaulting of the well survived only partially. The monument may be of Final Bronze Age or Early Iron Age date. Image submitted by SolarMegalith
Submitted by w650marion on Saturday, 26 April 2025 (467 reads)
Roman, Greek and ClassicalRoman Amphitheatre in Trier, Rhineland-Palatinate, built around the 2nd century AD / CE during the rule of Antoninus Pius. Measuring 120 by 145 meters, it could accommodate approximately 20,000 spectators and is the 10th largest Roman amphitheatre still intact. Image submitted by Harald_Platta
Submitted by Tonnox on Saturday, 26 April 2025 (1663 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeA dolmen in Svendborg with two orthostats (upright stones) and one capstone. There are cupmarks visible on some of the stones. Image submitted by Tonnox
Submitted by PeteCrane5 on Thursday, 24 April 2025 (9692 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeThree of the four standing stones surviving to the SW of this Clava ring-cairn, which measures 15.8m in diameter over a kerb of boulders. It's said that excavations in 1976-7 revealed large quantities of cremated bone in the central area. Image submitted by Dodomad
Ancient artefacts uncovered as Old Petty golf course takes shape close to this location. Chief among the finds is a wooden palisade, thought to be between 2-3,000 years old. More in the comments Read Article | 2 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages
Submitted by AufderSuche on Thursday, 24 April 2025 (190 reads)
Multi-periodThe Regenstein is a ruin of a castle usually dated to the 12th century but it is very likely that this place was used and carved in prehistoric times. Cracks and tunnels aligned with the sun can also be found here. Image submitted by AufderSuche
Submitted by DavidShepherd on Wednesday, 23 April 2025 (1167 reads)
Natural PlacesA huge stone (approx 3m x 1.5m x 1m) definitely propped by a boulder and a smaller stone. On the southern part of Bodmin moor.
There is sideways contact with a large adjacent stone that is itself propped.
The cavity underneath seems to be the result of manipulation and removals.
A stony bank runs straight up the hillside to the feature and then on to the burial cairn beyond. It is hard to conceive of a natural sequence of events that could have produced this arrangement. Image submitted by markj99
Submitted by markj99 on Tuesday, 22 April 2025 (235 reads)
Iron Age and Later PrehistoryThere are 2 probable crannogs in the SW corner of Carlingwark Loch, on the S edge of Castle Douglas in Dumfries and Galloway. "Two artificial islands were found when the loch was drained in 1765. At the same time two dugout canoes, a dam, to maintain the level of the water in the loch, and a planking floor were found." OSA 1794 (T Halliday). Fir Island, a natural island in the SW corner of Carlingwark Loch, is likely to be one of the fortified islands. Ash Island, an artificial island c. 55 yards N of Fir Island, is another likely candidate. Image submitted by markj99
Submitted by Harald_Platta on Tuesday, 22 April 2025 (240 reads)
Roman, Greek and ClassicalA large Roman hall built around 300-310 AD during the reigns of the Roman Emperors Constantius Chlorus and Constantine the Great. It originally served as the audience hall of the imperial palace when Trier was an important administrative centre of the Western Roman Empire. Located in Trier (Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany). Image submitted by Harald_Platta
Submitted by AlexHunger on Monday, 21 April 2025 (11066 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeSix menhirs on Sardinia, of which three represent female figures with breasts, about 1.2 to 1.5 meters tall. Near to the Tamuli tombs and Nuraghe at 719 Meters altitude. See the Nearby sites list or interactive map from our page for more.
Image submitted by DrewParsons
Submitted by dooclay on Sunday, 20 April 2025 (434 reads)
Early Medieval (Dark Age)"An irregulary executed and chipped latin cross with an incised cross on each face, the limbs of which appear to have originally extended to the edge of the stone." (Langdon) Located in Hilltown, St Neot, Cornwall. Each cross has a marked inclination to the right. It is similar to the Latin crosses preserved, along with other styles, in nearby St Neot churchyard. Image submitted by dooclay
Submitted by Antonine on Sunday, 20 April 2025 (67406 reads)
Iron Age and Later PrehistoryThe camp is a circular earthwork with double banks. Probably built by the Iceni in the second century BC and occupied until the tribe was wiped out by the Romans after Boudicca's uprising. Unfortunately, the western end which contained the original entrance was destroyed when the river course was re-routed. The other entrances are all supposedly modern. Still, it's a fine, impressive place with high banks and a deep ditches. Image submitted by Antonine
Free ebook: Archaeology for Wellbeing at Warham Camp follows the later prehistoric Norfolk Project wellbeing and artistic activities during excavations at Warham Camp in 2023, details in the comments Read Article | 10 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages
Submitted by NicolaDidsbury on Sunday, 20 April 2025 (405 reads)
Date UncertainThis block of sandstone is located on the southern bank of the River Eden approximately 200m upsteam of another grinding stone discovered over a decade earlier. The stone has around 15 separate grooves, almost certainly made by the use of the stone for sharpening tools. It is highly likely that these tools would have been Neolithic axes and other tools quarried from the central Lake District fells between 4000 and 2000BC, however they could be more recent. Image submitted by nicoladidsbury
Submitted by Anne T on Sunday, 20 April 2025 (1804 reads)
Natural PlacesThis propped stone sits at an altitude of 370m, the slab measuring 40cms thick, 80cms wide and 110cms long. The slab is made of Great Scar Limestone. This slab is placed on a low knoll; its precise origin is not immediately clear, but the stone matches both the scar above and a lower limestone pavement. There are no other similar slabs in the vicinity. There is one prop - an irregular piece of limestone - which supports the slab, which is smaller than in other similar features; it is also trapped by the slab against the bedrock at an unnatural angle. Image submitted by cavers35
Submitted by Andy B on Saturday, 19 April 2025 (439 reads)
Roman, Greek and ClassicalA discovery underneath the basement of an office block near Leadenhall Market has been described as one of the most important pieces of Roman history unearthed in the city of London. Archaeologists have found a substantial piece of the ancient city's first basilica - a 2,000 year old public building where major political, economic and administrative decisions were made. Image submitted by Dodomad
Submitted by mrcrow on Saturday, 19 April 2025 (665 reads)
Multi-periodThe remains of an Umayyad palace sitting on the site of an older Roman fort, built sometime in the 2nd or 3rd century CE. It was demolished in the 8th century by the Umayyads to repurpose the site as a more comfortable palace. Materials of the older Roman fort were integrated into the Umayyad palace. There are reused basalt blocks with Greek inscriptions in the walls of the Qasr. Image submitted by mrcrow
Submitted by TheCaptain on Saturday, 19 April 2025 (3571 reads)
Neolithic and Bronze AgeThis menhir is to be found in a garden in the hamlet of the same name, a kilometre or so to the north of Tredion. The menhir is about 4 metres tall and nicely shaped, although it looks to have lost its top at some point, possibly due to a lightning strike. Image submitted by peulven
Submitted by johndhunter on Friday, 18 April 2025 (297 reads)
Modern SitesAn early C18 guide stone which local archaeologist Raymond Hayes thought looked suspiciously like a re-used Roman Altar . It is located on the east side of the road in a small Intake behind a barbed wire fence. This is on Birk Field Bank, south west of Castleton on the road to Westerdale. It is suffering badly from erosion and depending on how the light falls on the stone determines the legibility of some of the engravings. Image submitted by johndhunter