The scheme — reminiscent of "Catch Me If You Can," the movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio — lasted four years, U.S. prosecutors said.
New research uses tiny mineral clues to show people moved Stonehenge stones, not glaciers, changing how we view ancient engineering.
Stonehenge, one of the most examined prehistoric structures globally, is located on Salisbury Plain in southern England. The ...
The mystery of how Stonehenge’s massive stones ended up in southern England may finally have a clear answer. A new scientific ...
A major debate over the construction of the mysterious Neolithic Stonehenge site in the UK may finally have been resolved.
A new analysis of mineral grains has refuted the "glacial transport theory" that suggests Stonehenge's bluestones and Altar ...
In modern Britain, all roads lead to London, but one can still find traces of older routes and borders that once subdivided ...
New research sheds light on one of archaeology’s longest-running debates: how Stonehenge’s massive bluestones reached their ...
Ask people how Stonehenge was built and you’ll hear stories of sledges, ropes, boats and sheer human determination to haul stones from across Britain to Salisbury Plain, in south-west England. Others ...
A 66 million-year-old mystery behind how our planet transformed from a tropical greenhouse to the ice-capped world of today has been unraveled by scientists. Their new study has revealed that Earth's ...
A new study shows the monument’s most exotic stones did not arrive by chance but were instead deliberately selected and ...
Tiny crystals in river sand challenge the idea that glaciers moved Stonehenge’s stones and point instead to human transport.