DROUGHT REVEALS "SPANISH STONEHENGE" OLDER THAN THE PYRAMIDS [View all]
MARCH 1, 2020
After 50 years of immersion on the bottom of a basin, in Spain, a 5,000-year-old monument emerged.
There are 144 granite blocks on the megalithic site, which are over 6 feet high, known as Spanish Stonehenge. Its similarity to the UNESCO World Heritage site in Wiltshire is striking, but the Iberian version is made of smaller rocks.
The Spanish General ordered the construction of a hydroelectric dam at Peraleda de la Mata, near Cáceres in Extremadura, which was supposed to be condemned to the history books of the 1960s.
The Dolmen de Guadalperal, also known as the Spanish Stonehenge, has been completely exposed for the first time in 50 years following the drought.
Some of the megaliths reach two meters in height.
However, a severe and prolonged drought has seen the structure emerge as the last drops of water vanished from the barren basin. Western Spain is being ravaged by a year-long drought and the Bronze Age structure, thought to be an ancient temple, can now be seen.
More:
https://archaeology-world.com/drought-reveals-spanish-stonehenge-older-than-the-pyramids/