The Rujm el-Hiri site in the Golan Heights has been shrouded in mystery as new research indicates that it may not have been an astronomical observatory as originally theorized, according to a ...
A groundbreaking study has cast doubt on the long-held belief that Rujm el-Hiri, an ancient structure in the Golan Heights, functioned as an astronomical observatory. Known as the Wheel of Spirits, ...
A new study by Tel Aviv University and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev reveals groundbreaking findings about the famous Rujm el-Hiri site (known as the "Wheel of Ghosts") in the Golan Heights.
An aerial picture shows Rujm el-Hiri, an archaeological site of the early bronze age II period. Rujm el-Hiri, an ancient basalt rock structure, situated in the Golan Heights, about 16 kilometres ...
A new analysis of the 6,000-year-old stone circle known as Rujm el-Hiri (also Gilgal Refaim) in Golan Heights suggests that it was not built to observe the heavens. When you purchase through links ...
Rujm el-Hiri couldn’t have been an astronomical observatory, at least as we view it today. Why? Because the earth beneath it is moving. Every year, the tectonic plates in the area around Golan ...
Rujm el-Hiri, ancient stone structure in the Golan Heights, Israel. Credit: אסף.צ / CC BY-SA 3.0 A recent study has questioned the long-held belief that Rujm el-Hiri, the ancient Golan stone circle in ...
Called Rujm el-Hiri, it is often referred to as the 'Stonehenge of the East' due to its similarities to the English monument. Roughly 16 kilometres inland from the Sea of Galilee, it is made up of ...
November 10, 2021. (photo credit: Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images) The Rujm el-Hiri site in the Golan Heights has been shrouded in mystery as new research indicates that it may not have been ...
Archaeologists think the oldest parts of the Rujm el-Hiri stone circle in the Golan Heights were built more than 6,000 years ago. | Credit: Samion Buchas via Shutterstock An ancient and enigmatic ...
Rujm el-Hiri couldn’t have been an astronomical observatory, at least as we view it today. Why? Because the earth beneath it is moving. Every year, the tectonic plates in the area around Golan Heights ...