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The whole area around Stonehenge is dotted with prehistoric cemeteries
-- some of which predate the monument itself -- and new discoveries are made occasionally. Last year, researchers said they had found a small circle of stones on the banks of the nearby River Avon. Experts speculated the stone circle
-- dubbed "Bluehenge" because it was built with bluestones -- may have served as the starting point of a processional walk that began at the river and ended at Stonehenge. Chapman's team is still in the early stages of its work, having surveyed only about four square kilometers (1.5 square miles) of the 16 square kilometers (six square miles) it eventually plans to map. The survey is being led by the University of Birmingham and the Austria-based Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Archaeological Prospection and Virtual Archaeology, with support from other institutions and researchers from Germany, Norway and Sweden. Henges of various descriptions exist throughout Britain -- from the Standing Stones o' Stenness on the northern island of Orkney to the Maumbury Rings in southern England county of Dorset. Stonehenge, a World Heritage Site, remains the best-known.
___ Online: Stonehenge: University of Birmingham: http://www.bham.ac.uk/
http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/
daysout/properties/stonehenge/
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