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New theory could finally solve one of Stonehenge's biggest mysteries | The Independent

the-independent.com

A submerged lost land called Doggerland may hold the key to why Stonehenge was built where it was — and the theory rewrites everything we thought we knew about prehistoric migration and monument-building.

Climate Migration TheoryCollective MemoryLandscape ArchaeologyCultural Trauma
New theory could finally solve one of Stonehenge's biggest mysteries | The Independent

Theory Briefing

  • Doggerland, a vast landmass connecting Britain to Europe, was swallowed by the North Sea as climate change melted post-Ice Age glaciers.
  • The new theory suggests Stonehenge's location was deliberately chosen by displaced Doggerland communities as a memorial or ancestral landmark after their homeland vanished.
  • Climate-driven migration theory frames Stonehenge not as a calendar or burial site, but as a monument to collective grief and lost identity.