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1 vote
When Stonehenge was built, stones were brought from many miles away. Of the stones that traveled the furthest, approximately how many miles did these stones travel to get to Stonehenge?

360

100

500

240

asked
User Braunson
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8.7k points

2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

100 to 150 miles

Step-by-step explanation:

As a prehistoric stone circle, it is unique because of its artificially shaped sarsen stones (blocks of Cenozoic silcrete), arranged in post-and-lintel formation, and because of the remote origin of its smaller bluestones (igneous and other rocks) from 100–150 miles (160–240 km) away, in South Wales.

answered
User Brianstewey
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7.9k points
5 votes

Answer is D. 240 miles

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User CynicalSection
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7.3k points