Neolithic People Controlled Cattle With Great Efficiency 6000 Years Ago; Planned Births During Summer Pastures Recent research unveiled that Neolithic communities from the Iberian Peninsula had ...
The ditches were subsequently closed. Evidence from the site indicates that Neolithic people deposited the stones en masse over a short period—possibly in a single event—around 2900 B.C ...
Neolithic people buried hundreds of stones carved with images of the sun about 4900 years ago and they may have done it because a volcanic eruption covered the sky ...
“It is reasonable to believe that the Neolithic people on Bornholm wanted to protect themselves from further deterioration of the climate by sacrificing sun stones – or perhaps they wanted to ...
Rather, Rispebjerg and Vasagård were both places where people gathered for community rituals. Such sites existed throughout Europe during the Neolithic period, Iversen said. At Vasagård ...
Malta is home to some of the oldest and arguably most mysterious megalithic structures known to man, older than the Pyramids and Stonehenge.
The Neolithic communities of the Iberian Peninsula were already strategically and efficiently managing cattle herds 6,000 years ago, moving them from low pasture lands to mid-mountain regions to ...
The sites on Bornholm weren’t settlements. Rather, Rispebjerg and Vasagård were both places where people gathered for community rituals. Such sites existed throughout Europe during the Neolithic ...