Bardonecchia : il torrente in Valle Stretta
Morgenlicht - 20220420
Atardecer de otoño, 1
Atardecer de otoño, 2
Atardecer de otoño, 3
Gold mountain (Hbm)
(Hbm) Blue Water castle
Ardrishaig Harbour
Monserrate
Serendipia
Himalayas Pakistan/China Border 16th October 1983
Lonesome red
1 (558)...austria bad weather
Bees on Euphorbia kamponii ..
HWW
Retama monosperma, Monte Gordo, HWW
Weinberge bei Walporzheim
DE - Nohn - An der Nohner Mühle
DE - Mirbach - Erlöserkapelle
Colors and Lines
Everything Green
Monsaraz, Enlighted
...that's clear...it's right here...
Cromeleque dos Almendres
Cromeleque do Xerez
Rêve d'été en montagne
Biebosch hills
Calculate
Autumn flowers, Heide
North Melbourne Red 3
Errol Street
Travehafen Hamburg
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Monsaraz, Door and window
Castle Farm 'Het Sibberhuuske' 16 century--Villa…
Une piscine en or
Solomon's Seal (PiP)
Pool
HFF - Sines to Sagres
Along the long ling--HFF for every one--26-5-2023
1 (553)...austria vienna...prater herbst autumn
The narrowest passage of south limburg
Weinberge bei Walporzheim
Monsaraz, Walls
Plage miroir
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Menir dos Almendres
The Cromlech of the Almendres (Portuguese: Cromeleque dos Almendres/Cromeleque na Herdade dos Almendres) is a megalithic complex (commonly known as the Almendres Cromlech), located near the village of Nossa Senhora de Guadalupe, in the civil parish of Nossa Senhora da Tourega e Nossa Senhora de Guadalupe, municipality of Évora, in the Portuguese Alentejo. The largest existing group of structured menhirs in the Iberian Peninsula (and one of the largest in Europe), this archaeological site consists of several megalithic structures: cromlechs and menhir stones, that belong to the so-called "megalithic universe of Évora", with clear parallels to other cromlechs in Portela Mogos (in Montemor-o-Novo).[1]
The construction of these structures dates back to the 6th millennium BC. They were rediscovered in 1966 by Henrique Leonor Pina, who was carrying out field work relating to the country's geological charts.[1][3][4][5]
The excavation of the site unearthed a series of both megalithic and neolithic construction phases; Almendres I 6000 BC (Early Neolithic), Almendres II 5000 BC (Middle Neolithic), and Almendres III 4000 BC (Late Neolithic). The relative chronology of the cromlech and menhirs is extremely complex and covers a period from the Neolithic to Chalcolithic. It is believed that the monument either had a religious/ceremonial purpose or functioned as a primitive astronomical observatory.[1][5]
Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almendres_Cromlech
The construction of these structures dates back to the 6th millennium BC. They were rediscovered in 1966 by Henrique Leonor Pina, who was carrying out field work relating to the country's geological charts.[1][3][4][5]
The excavation of the site unearthed a series of both megalithic and neolithic construction phases; Almendres I 6000 BC (Early Neolithic), Almendres II 5000 BC (Middle Neolithic), and Almendres III 4000 BC (Late Neolithic). The relative chronology of the cromlech and menhirs is extremely complex and covers a period from the Neolithic to Chalcolithic. It is believed that the monument either had a religious/ceremonial purpose or functioned as a primitive astronomical observatory.[1][5]
Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almendres_Cromlech
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