A Neolithic cow tooth discovered at Stonehenge dating back to its construction offers new evidence of the stone circle's Welsh origins, according to a new study involving UCL researchers. This is the ...
More than a century ago, archaeologists digging at Stonehenge uncovered a cow’s jawbone. It was placed deliberately beside the monument’s south entrance, dating to the very dawn of its construction ...
Stonehenge at sunset. Construction of the iconic stone circle began around 3000 B.C.E. and continued in several phases. Captain Skyhigh via Getty Images About 5,000 years ago, Neolithic inhabitants of ...
Among the many mysteries of Stonehenge is a cow jawbone that archaeologists found more than a century ago carefully laid beside the Neolithic monument’s southern entrance. The jawbone has since been ...
An ancient cow tooth unearthed beneath Stonehenge offers a “fascinating” clue about how the monument was built. Photo from Priyank V via Unsplash The mystery of how Stonehenge’s bluestones were ...
Scientists sliced open a Neolithic cow’s molar, and now they believe they know quite a bit more about the history of Stonehenge. This particular cow—or, at least, this particular cow’s jawbone—was ...