The sunstones, unearthed in Denmark, may have been part of a ceremony to end the volcanic winter and bring back the Sun. The archeologists uncovered 600 intricately engraved stone plaques on the ...
The stones appeared at the Neolithic, or New Stone Age, site of Vasagård approximately 4,900 years ago, at around the same time as a devastating volcanic winter in Northern Europe. The objects may ...
Neolithic people buried hundreds of stones carved with images of the sun about 4900 years ago and they may have done it because a volcanic eruption covered the sky ...
These eruptions likely cast a volcanic winter over the northern hemisphere, impacting the trees at Mount IÅ¡koras in Norway, where the study was conducted. "Blue rings look like unfinished growth ...
Letchworth isn’t the only place to witness this rare winter phenomenon. Along the frozen shores of Lake Ontario, water pushes ...
Scientists have also been concerned about severe winter weather across the region ... And the popular tourist destination ...