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Experts believe the cow originated from Wales and could have played an important role in transporting the famous stones across the UK. Find out more here.
New research of a molar supports the theory that cows or oxen could have moved the enormous stones from Wales to Salisbury ...
New evidence confirms link between Stonehenge and two quarries in Wales believed to be sources of historic Wiltshire landmark’s legendary standing bluestones ...
Research into a cow's molar that was discovered at the southern entrance of Stonehenge a century ago suggests it grew up in ...
More than a century ago, archaeologists digging at Stonehenge uncovered a cow’s jawbone. It was placed deliberately beside ...
For centuries, one of the great mysteries of Stonehenge surrounded how its enormous igneous bluestones were transported 280 kilometres from the Preseli Hills of Wales to England's Salisbury Plain...Re ...
A cow’s tooth found at Stonehenge uncovers surprising connections to Wales, shedding light on the long-standing Stonehenge ...
A Neolithic cow tooth discovered at Stonehenge dating back to its construction offers new evidence of the stone circle's ...
Research offers evidence for the first time about links between cattle remains at Stonehenge and Wales.
Previous isotopic analyses of cow teeth from Durrington Walls suggest that some cattle were herded almost 100km from Devon or Wales to the site for large-scale feasting.
Intestinal parasites in the Neolithic population who built Stonehenge (Durrington Walls, 2500 BCE). Parasitology, 2022; 1 DOI: 10.1017/S0031182022000476 ...