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  2. Valheim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valheim

    Valheim is an open-world survival game played from a third-person perspective. As fallen Vikings, players must craft tools, build shelters and fight enemies to survive. [5] The game uses low-resolution stylized 3D graphics, with a combat system inspired by action games. [6] Co-operative gameplay with up to ten people and optional PvP gameplay ...

  3. Chacmool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chacmool

    In Aztec examples, the receptacle is a cuauhxicalli (a stone bowl to receive sacrificed human hearts). Chacmools were often associated with sacrificial stones or thrones. [1] The chacmool form of sculpture first appeared around the 9th century AD in the Valley of Mexico and the northern Yucatán Peninsula.

  4. Senegambian stone circles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senegambian_stone_circles

    The Senegambian stone circles (French: Cercles mégalithiques de Sénégambie), or the Wassu stone circles, [1] are groups of megalithic stone circles located in the Gambia north of Janjanbureh and in central Senegal. Spread across a region 30,000 km 2 (12,000 sq mi), [2] they are sometimes divided into the Wassu (Gambian) and Sine-Saloum ...

  5. Corleck Head - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corleck_Head

    The Corleck Head consists of a circular piece of local limestone [3] carved into a tricephalic skull cut off before the neck, [2] with three faces. [4] The head is a relatively large example of the type being 33 cm (13 in) high and 22.5 cm (8.9 in) at its widest point [5]

  6. America's Stonehenge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America's_Stonehenge

    Some of the rocks at America's Stonehenge. 42°50′35″N71°12′25″W / 42.84306°N 71.20694°WAmerica's Stonehenge is a privately owned tourist attraction and archaeological site consisting of a number of large rocks and stone structures scattered around roughly 30 acres (12 hectares) within the town of Salem, New Hampshire, in the ...

  7. Kapaemahu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kapaemahu

    The tradition of Kapaemahu, like all pre-contact Hawaiian knowledge, was orally transmitted. [11] The first written account of the story is attributed to James Harbottle Boyd, and was published by Thomas G. Thrum under the title “Tradition of the Wizard Stones Ka-Pae-Mahu” in the Hawaiian Almanac and Annual for 1907, [1] and reprinted in 1923 under the title “The Wizard Stones of Ka-Pae ...

  8. Mount Ebal site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Ebal_site

    The Iron Age I Structure on Mt. Ebal, [1] [2] also known as the Mount Ebal site, [1] Mount Ebal's Altar, and Joshua's Altar, [3] [4] is an archeological site dated to the Iron Age I, located on Mount Ebal, West Bank. [1] The Mount Ebal site was discovered by Israeli archaeologist Adam Zertal during the Manasseh Hill Country Survey in 1980. [1]

  9. Ring of Brodgar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_of_Brodgar

    Bren gun carriers of the 9th Battalion, Gordon Highlanders pass between the prehistoric standing stones 18 June 1941. The Ring of Brodgar (or Brogar, or Ring o' Brodgar) is a Neolithic henge and stone circle in Mainland, Orkney, Scotland. It is the only major henge and stone circle in Britain which is an almost perfect circle.