• Just like Stonehenge, nobody definitively knows the true purpose of Woodhenge. ... Is there any connection between Woodhenge and Stonehenge?
  • Heading immediately south from Durrington walls we soon will encounter Woodhenge, the elemental antithesis of Stonehenge itself.
  • ...theories have been supported by findings of bones of butchered pigs exclusively at Woodhenge, showing evidence of feasting, leaving Stonehenge as a site.
  • Only a stones throw from Stonehenge, is a Neolithic timber monument known as Woodhenge. Built in about 2500 BC, roughly the same time as...
  • Woodhenge is free anyway, but Stonehenge costs about £20 per adult and parking can be £5 per car there, making it an expensive place to visit.
  • A contemporary monument to Stonehenge, Woodhenge was a series of timbers erected in oval rings, and like Stonehenge is aligned to the rising sun on the...
  • On the south side is an old concrete pillar with a brass description plate. woodhenge-5. ... Sources: Wikipedia / Stonehenge Tours / National Geographic.
  • She named the place “Woodhenge” because of its numerous parallels to the adjacent Stonehenge. About the Cunnington family who excavated Woodhenge.
  • Woodhenge, including the surrounding bank and ditch, is 360 feet in diameter. ... If I get to Stonehenge now I'll make the extra visit to Woodhenge.
  • The solution is that Durrington Walls and Woodhenge, so close to Stonehenge and houses, are reportedly found within the ‘henge’.
  • Similar to the ancient Stonehenge, the exact purpose of Woodhenge is unknown. It was previously assumed that Woodhenge was a template for Stonehenge.
  • Visually, Woodhenge is neither a pretty nor an impressive site, unlike its nearest neighbour, Stonehenge, some 1.9 miles to the southwest.
  • New research has revealed that the ancient monuments Woodhenge and Stonehenge are contemporary with one another, not built hundreds of years apart as...