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Zero Mile Stone (ISO: Śūnya Mailācā Dagaḍa) is a monument built by the British during the Great Trigonometrical Survey of India in 1907 in Nagpur, Maharashtra. [1] [2] The Zero Mile Stone consists of a pillar made up of sandstone and another small stone representing the GTS Standard Bench Mark, and four stucco horses that were added later.
Another view of the Stone Circle. The stone circles of Junapani is an uninhabited burial site containing Sepulchral megaliths with remains of the dead. These are found in a small area, about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) northwest of Nagpur city in central India, in the Vidharba region.
Nagpur Fort on the bank of the river, said to have been built by Jatba, one of the Gond kings: N-MH-N76 Fort at the bottom of the hill Donagartal: Nagpur Upload Photo: N-MH-N77 Temple Ghogra: Nagpur Upload Photo: N-MH-N78 Stone Circle Ghorar: Nagpur Upload Photo: N-MH-N79 Stone Circle: Junapani: Near Fetari, down MH SH 248. Nagpur
English: Junapani is situated some 11 km from Nagpur on Maharashtra State Highway 248. Stone circles here are a prehistoric megalithic structure. Stone circles here are a prehistoric megalithic structure.
Zero Mile Freedom Park [1] is an elevated metro station on the North-South corridor of the Orange Line of Nagpur Metro in the city of Nagpur, Maharashtra. It is named after the nearby Zero Mile Stone which was built in 1907 to mark the Great Trigonometrical Survey of India. [2] The station was opened on 21 August 2021. [3]
Map of Nagpur district of Maharashtra: Date: 2 March 2021: Source: Derivative of File:India Maharashtra location map.svg: Author: Own work based on User:Chumwa ...
In Vidharba, the Naikund, Mahurjhari, Borgaon 40 km (25 mi) southwest of Nagpur and Khairwada 80 km (50 mi) west of Nagpur megalithic sites have been excavated. [16] Gorewada Stone Circles in Nagpur, connected to both Junapani and Mahurzari civilisation, are India's largest stone circle and it has the highest number of circular stones in India ...
Nagpur (Marathi: [naːɡpuːɾ]; ISO: Nāgapura) is the winter capital and third-largest city of the Indian state of Maharashtra. [15] It is called the heart of India because of its central geographical location. [16]