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Stonehenge

Published on Nov 27, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

STONEHENGE

BY: ISAAC TOMASCHEFSKY
Photo by denovich

WHERE

  • Address: Amesbury, Wiltshire
  • SP4 7DE, United Kingdom
  • 51.17° N, 1.82° W
Photo by dannysullivan

WHAT

  • The Stonehenge is a human characteristic.
  • The Stonehenge is thought to be used as an many things.
  • People go to the Stonehenge to see one of the worlds greatest mystery.

MADE OF

  • The Stonehenge was built out of bluestone, a type of stone found by what is now southwestern Wales.
  • These stones weigh about 4 ton each and each is about 18 feet tall.
  • Though the Stonehenge is mostly stone it is also wood.
Photo by Qalinx

THEORIES

  • There are many theories about the Stonehenge here are some,
  • It has been thought to be a altar, healing ground, and even a graveyard.
  • We are learning more and more about the Stonehenge the more we study,
  • leading to more and more theories.
Photo by LitasWorld

ABOUT

  • Stonehenge is huge rocks that were meant to be a circle but was destroyed.
  • Some scientist think that the Stonehenge is a calendar because there is holes filled,
  • with white chalk and each hole represents a solar or lunar eclipse.

DAMAGE

  • There has been a lot of damage to the Stonehenge including,
  • Weather, the rain and snow has damaged the Stonehenge,
  • The Romans used to stone from the Stonehenge for biulding material.

SOURCES

  • Web Site Web Page View live Web page Archive & annotate page "The Secrets Underneath Stonehenge." SIRS Discover. N.p., 6 Oct. 2014. Web. 13 Oct. 2014. .
  • Stonehenge Britannica School. Britannica Digital Learning, n.d. Web. 2014. . Created: 10/14/14 12:02 PM
  • "Sacred Places Stonehenge." Witecombe. SACRED PLACES is written and produced by Christopher L. C. E. Witcombe, Professor, Department of Art History, Sweet Briar College, Virginia, 24595 USA, n.d. Web. 14 Oct. 2014. .
  • Mysteries of History. History.com, n.d. Web. 14 Oct. 2014. .