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  2. Cyclopean masonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclopean_masonry

    Cyclopean masonry is a type of stonework found in Mycenaean architecture, built with massive limestone boulders, roughly fitted together with minimal clearance between adjacent stones and with clay mortar or [1] no use of mortar. The boulders typically seem unworked, but some may have been worked roughly with a hammer and the gaps between ...

  3. Stonemasonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonemasonry

    A 15-storey apartment building in La Tourette (Marseille), designed by Fernand Pouillon.Constructed using the massive precut stone method. Gobekli Tepe, early monumental Neolithic stonemasonry using flint-carved limestone columns (~9500 BCE) 12th-century stonemasonry at Angkor Wat Diamond-wire saw in use for quarrying marble Stonemason working with medieval tools Stonemasonry with andesite ...

  4. List of stone circles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stone_circles

    Aubrey Burl's gazetteer lists 1,303 stone circles in Britain, Ireland and Brittany ( France).Most of these are found in Scotland, with 508 sites recorded. There are 343 on the island of Ireland; 316 in England; 81 in Wales; 49 in Brittany (France); and 6 in the Channel Isles.

  5. Carnac stones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnac_stones

    The Ménec alignments, the best-known megalithic site among the Carnac stones Stones in the Kerlescan alignments Megalithic alignments at Carnac Le Menec alignments. The Carnac stones (Breton: Steudadoù Karnag) are an exceptionally dense collection of megalithic sites near the south coast of Brittany in northwestern France, consisting of stone alignments (rows), dolmens (stone tombs), tumuli ...

  6. List of decorative stones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_decorative_stones

    Onyx sculpture in the grounds of St Pancras New Church, London. This is a geographical list of natural stone used for decorative purposes in construction and monumental sculpture produced in various countries.

  7. Stone circle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone_circle

    Recumbent stone circles are a variation containing a single large stone placed on its side. The stones are often ordered by height, with the tallest being the portals, with gradually reducing heights around each side of the circle, down to the recumbent stone, which is the lowest. [8]

  8. Megalithic architectural elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalithic_architectural...

    European dolmens, especially hunebed and dyss burials, often provide examples of the use of kerbs in megalithic architecture but they were also added to other kinds of chamber tomb. Kerbs may be built in a dry stone wall method employing small blocks or more commonly using larger stones set in the ground.

  9. Megalithic art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalithic_art

    Megalithic art is found in many places in Western Europe although the main concentrations are in England, Malta, Ireland, Brittany and Iberia. Megalithic art started in the Neolithic and continued into the Bronze Age. Although many monument types received this form of art the majority is carved on Neolithic passage graves. Megalithic art tends ...