Chapter Two: Teotihuacan
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GREAT BRITAIN
Home of a Forgotten Past
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For information on the origin of these monuments, go to the Current Theories section. Otherwise, continue on to Teotihuacan.
The continent of Great Britain is home to many hundreds of neolithic sites. So many, in fact, that it would serve no purpose to list them here. Only the most enigmatic sites, those that apply to the genesis of solid theory as expressed in the Current Theories pages, will be assessed. For all intensive purposes, places such as Newgrange in Ireland, Skara Brae in Northern Scotland, and even Carnac in Brittany (France) will be represented in this section, even though they are not part of Great Britain itself.
There are many, many more sites such as these above that have not recieved mention within these pages, though by all means this does not render them inconsequential. For all intensive purposes, the pages supplied above have been effective in proving the point; around the time of 3,200 B.C. and 2,700 B.C. there was an enormous output of energy in charting the skies, as if re-affirming their knowledge of time, of the calendar. So why? Why all of a sudden the need to re-learn the movements of the stars, the timing of the solstices?
Sub-Chapter One: Avebury.
Sub-Chapter Two: Stonehenge.
Sub-Chapter Three: Newgrange.
Sub-Chapter Four: Tuatha Dé Dannan.
Sub-Chapter Five: Skara Brae.
Sub-Chapter Six: Maes Howe.
Sub-Chapter Seven: The Stones of Stenness.
Sub-Chapter Eight: The Ring of Brodgar.
Sub-Chapter Nine: Carnac.