Neolithic Europe
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A 6,300-Year-Old Stone Monument Complex in France Rewrites Ritual Prehistory
Archaeologists in Brittany, western France, have uncovered a 6,300-year-old Neolithic stone complex with monumental standing stones, aligned slabs, and ceremonial features. Radiocarbon dating suggests organized ritual architecture in Western Europe began far earlier than once thought, challenging assumptions about early human society, symbolic belief, and the origins of megalithic construction.
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Menga Dolmen’s Medieval Burials: A Megalith That Refused to Become a Ruin
A new analysis of the Menga Dolmen in Andalusia reveals that two men were buried there between the 8th and 11th centuries CE, showing the Neolithic monument remained ritually active long after its construction. Radiocarbon dating and degraded DNA indicate later communities deliberately reused the site, aligning the face-down burials with the dolmen’s axis.