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The Georgia Guidestones was a granite monument that stood in Elbert County, Georgia, United States, from 1980 to 2022. It was 19 feet 3 inches (5.87 m) tall and made from six granite slabs weighing a total of 237,746 pounds (107,840 kg). [ 1 ]
The Georgia Guidestones were always mysterious, and strangely magnetic, drawing tourists and miscreants alike during their 42-year lifespan. Mullenix thought of them fondly, because he laid...
The Georgia Guidestones, a 19-foot mysterious granite monument in the Peach State, was demolished on Thursday for safety reasons, after being damaged in a blast.
The Georgia Guidestones formed a granite monument that stood on one of the highest hilltops in Elbert County. The monument's four supporting stones were each more than sixteen feet tall and bore ten guides dealing with government, population control, the environment, and spirituality.
Sometimes called “America’s Stonehenge,” the Georgia Guidestones are just as mysterious as their name suggests. These massive slabs arranged into a towering monument in rural Georgia confounded tourists for decades. What we do know about the origins of the Georgia Guidestones hardly makes the picture any clearer.
The Georgia Guidestones, granite slabs inscribed with moralistic instructions, were damaged in an unexplained explosion early Wednesday.
Georgia Guidestones. Known as "America's Stonehenge," the Georgia Guidestones in Elbert County were unveiled on March 22, 1980, after a mysterious man known as R. C. Christian commissioned a local company to engrave the stones with ten maxims to "an age of reason."
hippazoid. In Elbert County, Georgia there’s a set of stones called the Georgia Guidestones. They were put there in 1979, with a set of ten guidelines, in eight modern languages and four dead...
Georgia Guidestones - one of America's greatest mysteries. Stonehenge and the eerie allure of ancient stone circles. The 19ft-high (5.8m) structure near Elberton, east of Atlanta, was...
Affectionately referred to as America’s Stonehenge, 19-foot high granite monuments called the Georgia Guidestones were built in 1980. Both a display of the local Georgia granite and an astronomical calendar, they were a popular tourist attraction.