![]() ![]() Two types of stone are used at Stonehenge – the larger sarsens and the smaller ‘bluestones’. In about 2500 BC the stones were set up in the centre of the monument. About 64 cremations have been found, and perhaps as many as 150 individuals were originally buried at Stonehenge, making it the largest late Neolithic cemetery in the British Isles. Within and around the Aubrey Holes, and also in the ditch, people buried cremations. There has been much debate about what stood in these holes: the consensus for many years has been that they held upright timber posts, but recently the idea has re-emerged that some of them may have held stones. Within the bank and ditch were possibly some timber structures and set just inside the bank were 56 pits, known as the Aubrey Holes. ![]() This enclosed an area about 100 metres in diameter, and had two entrances. It is possible that features such as the Heel Stone and the low mound known as the North Barrow were early components of Stonehenge, but the earliest known major event was the construction of a circular ditch with an inner and outer bank, built about 3000 BC. ![]()
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