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Megaliths by David Corio

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Quinish (Stone Row)

Submitted by enkidu41 on Sunday, 14 June 2026   (11478 reads)

Quinish (Stone Row)

Neolithic and Bronze AgeA row of four stones on Mull surveyed by Professor Alexander Thom, aligned NNW-SSE. Only one remains upright currently. Sandy Gerrard from Stone Rows of Great Britain warns it is difficult to reach. A map and/or reliable GPS device is essential, or "the chances of getting hopelessly lost are high". Close by are 2 fallen stones with an almost concealed fourth pillar. Earlier reports indicate a fifth stone, now gone, which suggests that this was formerly a 5-stone row about 33' long.
Image submitted by MegalithicMouse

Coldwell Clough Anglo Saxon cross

Submitted by Boggart on Sunday, 14 June 2026   (8976 reads)

Coldwell Clough Anglo Saxon cross

Early MedievalThis wayside cross shaft, reported stolen in the 1970s, appears to be back! It would seem stylistically to date to the late Anglo Saxon period. It has the initials EB carved at the top, these belonging to one of the Bradburys who farmed at Coldwell Clough for centuries, where it was previously reused and probably turned into a sundial to decorate the farm.
Image submitted by sc1che

Bar'an Temple

Submitted by Anne T on Saturday, 13 June 2026   (689 reads)

Bar'an Temple

Multi-periodFive monumental stone pillars from the entrance portico stand against the desert sky in eastern Yemen, the most recognisable image of ancient South Arabian civilisation. Known as Arsh Bilqis - the Throne of Bilqis, or Throne of the Queen of Sheba - this Sabaean sun temple at Marib dates to approximately the 7th century BCE. Note: this site has been in the middle of an active conflict zone since 2014.
Image submitted by Anne T

Tenga (Mull)

Submitted by enkidu41 on Saturday, 13 June 2026   (12716 reads)

Tenga (Mull)

Neolithic and Bronze AgeRemnants of a ruined stone circle near to the southern end of Loch Frisa on the Isle of Mull. The circle would have had a diameter of approx. 33m - 40m with 4 surviving stones from an original estimated 11 to 14. The stones range in height from 0.95m to 2.2m.
Image submitted by Rthoyle

Surveyed recently by Robert T Hoyle, details on our page
Read Article | 6 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages

Piedra Pintada Archaeological Park

Submitted by Wguayana on Friday, 12 June 2026   (799 reads)

Piedra Pintada Archaeological Park

Rock ArtOn the mountain slopes surrounding the city of Valencia in Venezuela are numerous ancient indigenous paths, with many painted rocks and ceramic artifacts left by those inhabitants. The site has a small museum where some of these indigenous ceramics and sculpted rocks are exhibited.
Image submitted by Wguayana

Grandmother Kueka Rock

Submitted by Wguayana on Friday, 12 June 2026   (193 reads)

Grandmother Kueka Rock

Natural PlacesA rock highly valued by the indigenous tribes that inhabit this region of Venezuela. They consider this stone to be their ancestral grandmother. In 1998, the German visual artist Wolfgang von Schwarzenfeld removed it from its location and exhibited it in the Tiergarten park in Berlin (Germany). In 2020, the rock was returned to Venezuela, and is currently on display at a small tourist centre, next to an important natural river resort called "Quebrada de Jaspe".
Image submitted by Wguayana

Stanley Ferry Viking Log Boat

Submitted by Anne T on Friday, 12 June 2026   (113 reads)

Stanley Ferry Viking Log Boat

Early MedievalCurrently on display in the library above Wakefield Museum, this log boat is on loan from York Museums Trust, this is "Britain's only known Anglo-Scandinavian boat", discovered beneath the bed of the River Calder in 1838 during construction of the Stanley Ferry Aqueduct, and is a rare example of a Viking-period dugout boat in Britain.
Image submitted by Anne T

Book Review: Terence Meaden: The Stone Circles of Cork and Kerry Guide, with Analyses

Submitted by Andy B on Tuesday, 09 June 2026   (476 reads)

Book Review: Terence Meaden: The Stone Circles of Cork and Kerry Guide, with Analyses

ReviewsTerence Meaden's work has been known to readers of the Megalithic Portal for many years. His systematic study of British and Irish stone circles, arguing that their stone arrangements enact a recurring fertility symbolism - tall thin stones as the male principle, broader flat ones as female - is one of those bodies of research to engage with seriously whether or not you end up persuaded. Meaden visits sites at sunrise on the relevant festival dates. He measures, photographs, and documents. This book is the fullest statement of that fieldwork to date, covering around 120 stone circles across Cork and Kerry with analyses, dawn photography, and a complete site-by-site gazetteer.
Image submitted by KenWilliams

Julliberrie's Grave

Submitted by bec-zog on Monday, 08 June 2026   (17779 reads)

Julliberrie's Grave

Neolithic and Bronze AgeNeolithic (and Roman) Long Barrow which comprises a 44m long 15m wide, 2.5 m high earthen and turf covered chalk structure. A flint axe head dating to circa 2000BCE was found in the core. A ditch extends along eastern and western side side and southern end. In the upper layer of the ditch 4 Romano British burials were found.
Image submitted by Brian_Eyes

The White Horse Mummers Present (June 21st 7pm) - A Summer Solstice Special: The Ghosts of Midsummer Arise, A Merry Mayhem In Three Acts Mummers Play at Julliberrie's Grave long barrow. Followed by revelry, music, dance and more at the White Horse pub Chilham. Details on our page
Read Article | 11 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages

Vertesszollos Prehistoric Settlement

Submitted by Anne T on Monday, 08 June 2026   (179 reads)

Vertesszollos Prehistoric Settlement

Mesolithic, Palaeolithic and EarlierA Lower Palaeolithic site in the Vertes Hills of northwestern Hungary where Homo heidelbergensis (or possibly Homo erectus) left traces dating to approximately 350,000-400,000 years ago - among the earliest evidence of human presence in Central Europe. Excavations were carried out in the 1960s by Laszlo Vertes. The site has produced stone tools and, most remarkably, a partial occipital bone (the back of a skull) known as 'Vertesszollos Man' (Samu) - pictured.
Image submitted by Creative Commons

Jebel Moya Pastorialist Cemetery

Submitted by Anne T on Monday, 08 June 2026   (411 reads)

Jebel Moya Pastorialist Cemetery

Iron Age and Later PrehistoryOne of the largest pastoralist cemeteries in Africa, with over 3,000 burials excavated from a shallow valley on the isolated rocky hill of Jebel Moya in the Gezira plain of central Sudan, between the White Nile and Blue Nile rivers south of Khartoum. The site was first excavated by Henry Wellcome between 1911 and 1914 in one of the largest archaeological excavations ever conducted in Africa at that time, employing thousands of workers. The cemetery dates primarily to the 1st millennium BCE and early 1st millennium CE [Old Kingdom Period], though earlier occupation phases exist. The Wellcome Collection has records and photographs from the excavations, linked from our page.
Image submitted by Anne T

Holm of Papa Westray North

Submitted by Andy B on Sunday, 07 June 2026   (7891 reads)

Holm of Papa Westray North

Neolithic and Bronze AgeAn Early Neolithic stalled chambered cairn at the northern tip of Holm of Papa Westray, the small islet lying east of Papa Westray, Orkney. Ancient DNA results published in 2026 by Prof. Vicki Cummings and colleagues identified a father and son entombed here in the mid-3300s BCE alongside the father's maternal uncle or half-brother, and revealed that two of the women buried here were genetically connected to a male at Tulach an t-Sionnaich in Caithness - family links across the Pentland Firth at the very edge of early Neolithic Britain.
Image submitted by PAB

Tulloch of Assery (A and B)

Submitted by Andy B on Sunday, 07 June 2026   (6932 reads)

Tulloch of Assery (A and B)

Neolithic and Bronze AgeTwo chambered cairns at the edge of Loch Calder near Thurso. The level of the loch has been raised in recent years so the waters now lap the cairns. A further cairn, Tulach Na T-Sionnaich, is close by.
Image submitted by Creative Commons

Ancient DNA sampled from human remains placed in five chambered tombs in Caithness and Orkney - father, son and grandson in one tomb and family ties across the Pentland Firth - more on our pages
Read Article | 2 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages

Deer Park

Submitted by Cosmic on Saturday, 06 June 2026   (9585 reads)

Deer Park

Neolithic and Bronze AgeA setting of three stones, older reports describe a fourth fallen stone. Variously described as standing stones or the remains of a circle. They appear too small to be a recumbent stone circle so more likely a four poster.
Image submitted by golux

These beautiful standing stones in Aberdeenshire were recently vandalised with spray paint, police appeal for information
Read Article | 1 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages

Leith Hill Place

Submitted by Andy B on Saturday, 06 June 2026   (6871 reads)

Leith Hill Place

Multi-periodA lovely National Trust house but listed on the Portal because of Charles Darwin's 'Earthworm Stone' in the grounds. This was one of the sources of the research for Darwin's classic earthworm paper and book which are still cited by archaeologists today. The house also has some recently re-discovered wall paintings from the 1960s which are apparently copies of those at Knossos Palace on the island of Crete.
Image submitted by Jon Agar

Leith Hill Place is now open Saturdays and Sundays until the end of September, 11am-4pm.
Read Article | 4 News and Comments | Category: Our Photo Pages

Madara Rider Sculptured Stone

Submitted by Anne T on Friday, 05 June 2026   (651 reads)

Madara Rider Sculptured Stone

Early MedievalA monumental rock relief carved into a 100-metre-high cliff face near the village of Madara in north-eastern Bulgaria, depicting a horseman spearing a lion, with a dog running behind. The carving, approximately 23 m above the base of the cliff, dates to around 710 CE and is attributed to the early Bulgarian state under Khan Tervel. It is the only known large rock relief from the early medieval period in Europe and was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979. The Madara plateau also has traces of earlier occupation stretching back to the Neolithic and Thracian periods, including a cave sanctuary.
Image submitted by Anne T

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The Singing Neanderthals: The Origins of Music, Language, Mind and Body

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Tuesday, 02 June 2026
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Monday, 01 June 2026
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Sunday, 31 May 2026
Loch Buie Stone Circle
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Lambay Island Axe Quarry


Tuesday, 26 May 2026
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Monday, 25 May 2026
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Sunday, 24 May 2026
St Michael's Church (Kirkby Thore)
Uffington Castle Neolithic long barrow
 1 news/comment
Parkin
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Saturday, 23 May 2026
Lydney Hillfort
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Thursday, 21 May 2026
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 1 news/comment
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Wednesday, 20 May 2026
Painswick Beacon
 11 news/comments
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Tuesday, 19 May 2026
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Sunday, 17 May 2026
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Saturday, 16 May 2026
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Friday, 15 May 2026
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Thursday, 14 May 2026
Museo del Ejército, Toledo
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Wednesday, 13 May 2026
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Tuesday, 12 May 2026
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Monday, 11 May 2026
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Saturday, 09 May 2026
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