May 30, 2008


a brief history of stonehenge

As if Nigel’s theories weren’t enough, recent studies of Stonehenge suggest a large settlement surrounded the monument and perhaps select individuals were buried there.

“I don’t think it was the common people getting buried at Stonehenge — it was clearly a special place at that time. One has to assume anyone buried there had some good credentials.”

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2 Responses to “a brief history of stonehenge”

  1. Garry Denke on May 30th, 2008 at 12:56 pm

    Coal dusters. 21st June 1656

    Avebury coal duster, Cursus coal duster, Durrington Walls coal duster, Long Barrow coal duster, Robin Hood’s Ball coal duster, Stonehenge coal duster, Woodhenge coal duster, etc, all being originally simple coal hunting failures. Every one of them were coal exploration sites that did not yield any coal.

    Take away all of the dressed up cemetery headstone rocks and what have you got? Nothing more than a bunch of coal exploratory ditches and holes, that is what. Afterwards, these ditches and holes were utilised as grave plots, for tired disappointed coal explorers, and their cold disheartened families.

    Sad but true.

  2. Kevin Carr on May 30th, 2008 at 5:58 pm

    Yes Garry - and that is not all. The great pyramids of Egypt - coal dusters. The Acropolis of Athens - coal duster. The Kremlin - coal duster. Number 10 Downing Street - coal duster. Mount Everest - large coal duster. Very very sad.

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