The henge is an outer circle with a diameter of one hundred and six feet of grey sandstone uprights, which is roughly thirteen feet tall. The uprights in the circle are capped with long continuous lintels. A ditch with built up embankments surrounds the circle. Within the circle of grey sandstone are blue stones. The centre is shaped like a horseshoe and contains a grouping of five sets of stones standing upright that are topped with lintels. The middle one is the tallest and rises to twenty-four feet with a long and thick lintel. Today, these Stonehenge are located in Salisbury Plain, in Southern England. The heritage designation is that of a cultural designation in 1986 as a World Heritage site. “These prehistoric stone circles are a striking reminder of the architectural, engineering, social, and spiritual sophistication of Britain’s Neolithic people .” It is believed that Stonehenge is the site of ceremonies associated to both death and burials. This theory has comes from evidence looking at both the stone circles but more importantly at the nearby sites dating from the time periods that Stonehenge mainly used
The henge is an outer circle with a diameter of one hundred and six feet of grey sandstone uprights, which is roughly thirteen feet tall. The uprights in the circle are capped with long continuous lintels. A ditch with built up embankments surrounds the circle. Within the circle of grey sandstone are blue stones. The centre is shaped like a horseshoe and contains a grouping of five sets of stones standing upright that are topped with lintels. The middle one is the tallest and rises to twenty-four feet with a long and thick lintel. Today, these Stonehenge are located in Salisbury Plain, in Southern England. The heritage designation is that of a cultural designation in 1986 as a World Heritage site. “These prehistoric stone circles are a striking reminder of the architectural, engineering, social, and spiritual sophistication of Britain’s Neolithic people .” It is believed that Stonehenge is the site of ceremonies associated to both death and burials. This theory has comes from evidence looking at both the stone circles but more importantly at the nearby sites dating from the time periods that Stonehenge mainly used